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SF&F encyclopedia


A Rose for Armageddon
SCHENCK, HILBERT(Pocket Books/Timescape, 1982)As a new dark age looms, a
handful of aging intellectuals race to finish a project in the computer
simulation of social relationships in the history of a small island. A
mystery emerges whose solution may offer an opportunity for redemption not
only to the unhappy characters but also to their unhappy era. Poignant and
beautifully written; highly original in its recompilation of the timeslip
romance. Compare and contrast Jack Finney's Time and Again . See also TIME
TRAVEL

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
STEVENSON, ROBERT LOUIS(Scribner, 1886)This classic 19th-century
presentation of dual personality dramatizes the good and evil within each
human. Aware from his youth of a certain wickedness within his nature, Dr.
Jekyll experiments and develops a drug that brings his alter ego into
ascendancy, thereby transforming himself physically into Mr. Hyde. One
learns of the mystery through the eyes of the lawyer Utterson, but only a
final manuscript, the full statement of Henry Jekyll, explains the
relationship between him and Hyde. See also PSYCHOLOGY

Solar Lottery
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)( Ace, 1955)The initial version of this work
appeared as an Ace Double paired with The Big Jump by Leigh Brackett, a
work about as antithetical to Phil Dick's style and approach as it was
possible to get. A reissue, sans Brackett, by Gregg in 1976 contained an
appreciation by Thomas Disch. A world supposedly run at the top by the
random chances of a great lottery is actually a congeries of rival
industrial fiefs; would-be Quizmasters seek to rig the odds, and a former
Quizmaster by the rules of the game has the right to assassinate his
successor if the assassin can get past the incumbent's telepathic guards.
The complex plot is driven by games theory, which at the time of writing
was just coming into vogue; von Neumann and Morgenstern's Theory of Games
had recently been published, as well as a popularization titled Strategy
in Poker, Business, and War. Dick was concerned lest the mathematics of
games theory dissolve all political claims of law, tradition, and
morality, leaving only the rules of the game: "Minimax," he said in a
statement included with the book, "is gaining on us all the time." Dick's
first major work. Contrast A. E. van Vogt, The World of Null-A . See also
GAMES AND SPORTS

Rite of Passage
PANSHIN, ALEXEI(Ace, 1968)The heroine belongs to a starfaring culture,
and her rite de passage into adulthood involves her descent into a colony
world whose culture is very different. A homage to Robert A. Heinlein's
juveniles but more carefully and painstakingly constructed than most of
his models; compare especially his Tunnel in the Sky . Nebula winner,
1968. See also GENERATION STARSHIPS

Pavane
ROBERTS, KEITH(Hart-Davis, 1968)Fix-up novel describing what appears to
be an ALTERNATE WORLD where the Catholic church retained its hegemony in
Europe because of the victory of the Spanish Armada. But this
technologically retarded world also harbors fairies who know the real
truth, and when progress rears its ugly head again, its value is brought
sharply into question. A rich, many-faceted narrative, written with great
care and delicacy; one of the finest SF novels of the period. U.S.
editions add an extra episode. Compare Walter M. Miller's A Canticle for
Leibowitz and Kingsley Amis's The Alteration .

Mechasm
SLADEK, JOHN T(HOMAS)(Ace, 1969) Brit. title: The Reproductive
System(Gollancz, 1968) Metal-eating, self-replicating ROBOTS threaten to
destroy the fabric of civilization if they cannot be controlled and
contained, although if used responsibly they might pave the way to
paradise. A satirical parable of man/machine relationships. Compare and
contrast Rudy Rucker's SOFTWARE .

Neuromancer
GIBSON, WILLIAM(Ace, 1984)In a highly urbanized future dominated by
cybernetics and bioengineering, anti-hero Case is rescued from
wretchedness and given back the ability to send his persona into the
cyberspace of the world's computer networks, where he must carry out a
hazardous mission for an enigmatic employer. An adventure story much
enlivened by elaborate technical jargon and sleazy, streetwise
characters-the pioneering " CYBERPUNK" novel. Compare Vernor Vinge's TRUE
NAMES, Bruce Sterling's ISLANDS IN THE NET, and the film Blade Runner.
Hugo winner, 1985; Nebula winner, 1984

The Left Hand of Darkness
LE GUIN, URSULA K(ROEBER)(Ace, 1969) Recommended ed.: Walker, 1994.Humans
on the world of Winter are hermaphrodite, able to develop male or female
sexual characteristics during periodic phases of fertility. An envoy from
the galactic community becomes embroiled in local politics and is forced
by his experiences to reconsider his attitudes toward human relationships.
Serious, meticulous, and well written, the book has been much discussed
and praised because of its timely analytic interest in sexual politics.
The 1994 Walker reprint includes a new afterword and approximately 60
pages in four appendixes. Compare Theodore Sturgeon's Venus Plus X (1960).
Hugo winner, 1970; Nebula winner, 1969. See also SEX

The Big Time
LEIBER, FRITZ (REUTER)(Gregg, 1978)Serialized in Galaxy in 1957, "The Big
Time," a saga of soldiers from all times who have been recruited as
"Spiders" or "Snakes" to battle each other and alter past events to the
advantage of their own side, won the Hugo for that year. The primary
action takes place in a Spider R&R center outside the cosmos and is staged
theatrically, no doubt reflecting Leiber's own experience in his father's
repertory Shakespeare company. That novel (The Big Time, Ace, 1961) and a
collection of shorter stories on the Spiders-versus-Snakes theme, The Mind
Spider (Ace, 1961), were combined with other related pieces in this
collection from Gregg. Jack Williamson had anticipated the theme of
time-soldiers battling to change events in The Legion of Time , but
Williamson's version assumed a conventional Good-Evil dualism. Leiber's
vision was breathtakingly relativist; one principal character in The Big
Time, from a World War II that turned out differently, is the Nazi
gauleiter of Chicago! A major and disturbing work. Contrast Poul Anderson,
Time Patrol , and Leiber's own Destiny Times Three. Hugo winner, 1958. See
also TIME TRAVEL

The Einstein Intersection
DELANY, SAMUEL R(AY)(Ace, 1967)In the far future the nonhuman inhabitants
of Earth mine the mythologies of the ancient past in search of meanings
appropriate to their own existence; the hero must undertake an Orphean
quest into the underworld of the collective unconscious, confronting its
archetypes. A fabulous tour de force of the imagination. Compare Roger
Zelazny's THIS IMMORTALand Angela Carter's Infernal Desire Machines of Dr.
Hoffman. NW, 1967. See also MYTHOLOGY

Nine Hundred Grandmothers
LAFFERTY, R(APHAEL) A(LOYSIUS)(Ace, 1970)The first and best of Lafferty's
collections, followed by Strange Doings (1971), Does Anyone EIse Have
Something Further to Add? (1974), Ringing Changes (1984), and various
collections issued by small presses. Lafferty's shorter works tend to be
highly distinctive and idiosyncratic, often mixing materials from Celtic
or Amerindian folklore with SF motifs in order to produce tall stories
with a philosophical bite. At his most stylized he is comparable to Italo
Calvino's Cosmicomics , but he is rarely so abstracted and his stories
have a characteristic warmth as well as a breezy imaginative recklessness
and a good deal of wit. See also FABULATION

White Light
RUCKER, RUDY(Ace, 1980)A strange fantasy of life after death that has
abundant SF interest by virtue of the author's use of "higher dimensions"
as a milieu for displaying ideas drawn from number theory and other areas
of higher mathematics. The author suggests that this exercise in
"transrealism" can be regarded as the first element in a trilogy completed
by The Sex Sphere (1983), in which a hypersphere trapped into an
intersection with our 3-D space obligingly responds to the sexual
fantasies of the male characters, and The Secret of Life (1985). Rucker's
work invites comparison with some very early SF writers, including Camille
Flammarion and C. H. Hinton, as well as avant-garde figures like John
Shirley and Bruce Sterling. See also MATHEMATICS

Software
RUCKER, RUDY(Ace, 1982)Artificial intelligence has developed to the point
where computers can begin the inevitable power struggle with mankind.
Should we be prepared to put aside our frail flesh in favor of inorganic
forms that will preserve our personalities in their software? The
extravagant plot is well spiced with wit. The equally well done sequel is
Wetware (1988), and a third volume is expected. Both Software and Wetware
won the Philip K. Dick Award. Compare Marge Piercy's He, She, and It . See
also CYBERPUNK

The Wild Shore
ROBINSON, KIM STANLEY(Ace, 1984)After the nuclear holocaust the United
States is quarantined by the United Nations, and the survivors must remake
their civilization in isolation. The protagonist, his role analogous to
that of Huckleberry Finn, explores this new frontier world. The most
sophisticated example of contemporary American romantic catastrophism.
Compare Tim Powers's Dinner at Deviant's Palace and David Brin's The
Postman. Robinson followed The Wild Shore with two more novels set in the
same location in Southern California, thematic sequels considering
alternate historical possibilities. The Gold Coast (1988) describes a
near-future Orange County of superhighways and designer drugs that is only
marginally different from our own. Pacific Edge (1990), which won the JWC
Award, is set in a postdisaster, small-scale community where everything is
done with an eye toward its effect on the ecology. See also PASTORAL

Homunculus
BLAYLOCK, JAMES P.( Ace, 1986)Intricately plotted action-adventure story
set in Victorian England where the natural philosophers of the
Trismegistus Club battle a sinister reanimator of corpses and a greedy
entrepreneur while a tiny alien imprisoned in one of four identical boxes
is passed unwittingly from hand to hand, causing havoc wherever he goes. A
witty and very stylish combination of SF and Victorian melodrama. In the
sequel, Lord Kelvin's Machine (1992), the Earth is nearly destroyed by a
passing comet. Compare Tim Power's THE ANUBIS GATES (1983) and K. W.
Jeter's Infernal Devices (1987). See also STEAMPUNK

Synthajoy
COMPTON, D(AVID) G(UY)(Hodder & Stoughton, 1968) A machine is developed
that can record emotional experiences for later transmission into the
minds of others. Abused by its inventor, it is subsequently used in the
psychiatric treatment of his wife and murderer. Intricately constructed,
with fine characterization and compelling cynicism. Compare Barry N.
Malzberg's Cross of Fire. See also PSYCHOLOGY

Soldiers of Paradise
PARK, PAUL(Arbor, 1987)On a planet called Earth by its inhabitants,
though it and its solar system differ dramatically from our own, the
seasons last for lifetimes and, as in Brian W. Aldiss's Helliconia series,
they change with such violence that entire civilizations are in danger of
dying or being transformed. Two misfit members of the Starbridge family,
the planet's ruling class, wander through the confusion and growing
revolution of the oncoming springtime, pondering the ills of their
society. Soldiers of Paradise is nearly plotless, but its beautifully
wrought prose, carefully etched characters, and strong moral sense make it
an unforgettable experience. Two fine sequels are Sugar Rain (1989) and
The Cult of Loving Kindness (1991). Compare Aldiss's HELLICONIA series,
Michael Swanwick's STATIONS OF THE TIDE , and Gene Wolfe's Book of the New
Sun . See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

Islands in the Net
STERLING, BRUCE(Arbor, 1988)There's a perfectly fine plot here, involving
data piracy, and some nicely developed characters, including Laura, who
goes out and has adventures while her husband takes care of the baby. What
stands out in Sterling's novel, however, is the extraordinarily detailed
and highly believable world he has created. The almost universal presence
of the data Net, the widespread use of creative ecological engineering,
the economic and cultural interpenetration of formerly separate societies,
the fads and styles, all come together in one of the most fascinating
sociological and political SF novels in recent years. Compare Neal
Stephenson's SNOW CRASH. See also POLITICS

The Jaguar Hunter
SHEPARD, LUCIUS(Arkham, 1987)One of the finest collections of fantasy and
science fiction published in the 1980s. Probably the best story included
is the Nebula- and Locus Award-winning "R&R," the tale of an American
soldier on leave from a future war in Central America, which was later
incorporated into Shepard's second novel, Life During Wartime. Other
outstanding stories, many of them award nominees, include "The End of Life
as We Know It," "A Traveler's Tale," "The Man Who Painted the Dragon
Griaule," and "A Spanish Lesson." The Jaguar Hunter won the 1988 World
Fantasy Award for best collection. Shepard's second volume of short
stories, The Ends of the Earth (1991), also a World Fantasy Award nominee,
includes such fine pieces as "Delta Sly Honey," the award-nominated
"Shades," "The Ends of the Earth," and "Surrender." Compare James
Tiptree's Tales of the Quintana Roo(1986). See also FANTASY

The Luck of Brin's Five
WILDER, CHERRY (pseud. of Cherry Barbara Grimm)(Atheneum, 1977) Young
adultScott Gale, navigator of a terran bio-survey team on Torin,
crash-lands and is found and befriended by Dorn, member of the family
called Brin's Five. According to custom, the family considers Scott a
Diver and their new "luck." Through the ensuing adventures-in particular,
those involving flying machines and air races-and the dangerous intrigue
of those opposed to change, Scott proves he is indeed a "luck" and
precipitates a new openness to change among the people. Although the
narrative pace flags occasionally, the novel creates an original world and
culture vaguely Oriental. Sequels are The Nearest Fire (1980), which just
as engagingly continues to detail Torin, and The Tapestry Warriors (1983).
Compare Laurence Yep's Sweetwater. See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

A Song for Lya and Other Stories
MARTIN, GEORGE R(AYMOND) R(ICHARD)(Avon,1976)The title story of this
collection (Hugo winner, 1975) is one of several notable studies of an
alien species whose biology is such that their religious faith in life
after death has material foundation. One of the protagonists goes native
to take advantage of this opportunity, but her lover cannot. Martin is
generally at his best in medium-length stories. Nightflyers (reprinted as
a book, 1985) is another story of contact with mysterious aliens, while
the title story of the collection Sandkings (1981; Hugo winner, 1980) is a
memorable account of insectile "pets" learning to see their "owners" in a
new light. His other collections are Songs of Stars and Shadows (1977),
Songs the Dead Men Sing (1983), and, most recently, Portraits of His
Children (1987), whose Nebula-winning title story concerns an author whose
stories quite literally come alive. See also ALIENS

Macroscope
ANTHONY, PIERS (pseud. of Piers Anthony Jacob)( Avon, 1969)The macroscope
is an instrument allowing human observers access to the wonders of the
universe. When Homo sapiens is relocated in this cosmic perspective, the
narrative shifts to a quasi-allegorical mode in which the symbolic
significance of astrological lore is reworked. A more extended exercise in
the same vein is the trilogy God of Tarot (1979), Vision of Tarot (1980),
and Faith of Tarot (1980), which similarly attempts to display a modern
philosophy of life by reinterpreting the apparatus of an occult system. A
future series of this type, using even more baroque apparatus and taking
its pretensions even more seriously, is The Incarnations of Immortality, a
seven-volume saga begun with On a Pale Horse (1983). See also
COMMUNICATIONS

The Whole Man
BRUNNER, JOHN(Ballantine, 1964) Brit. title: Telepathist(1965)Developed
from two novellas. A crippled and deformed social outcast is nearly
destroyed by his telepathic powers, but learns to use them to create
therapeutic dreams for others and eventually to create a new art form.
Good characterization and sensitive narration. Compare Robert Silverberg's
Dying Inside and Roger Zelazny's THE DREAM MASTER . See also PSI POWERS

Walk to the End of the World
CHARNAS, SUZY MCKEE( Ballantine, 1974)In a grim, postholocaust world, the
Holdfast is a nightmarish, intensely patriarchal society where women are
treated as no more than subhuman breeders of the next generation of men.
The symbolically named Alldera escapes from captivity to the wilderness
and a new life. In Motherlines (1978) she discovers a number of all-female
societies, none of them utopian. Although both novels have occasional
weaknesses in style and plot, they serve as powerful indictment of
patriarchal attitudes. The Furies (1994), set much later, chronicles
Alldera's return to the Holdfast at the head of a conquering army. Compare
Sally Miller Gearhart's The Wanderground (1978) and Sheri S. Tepper's THE
GATE TO WOMEN'S COUNTRY. See also FEMINISM

The Space Merchants
POHL, FREDERIK, and C(YRIL) M. KORNBLUTH(Ballantine, 1953)Serialized in
Galaxy, 1952, as "Gravy Planet." Between the 1930s and the 1950s the
target of social criticism in America shifted from Wall Street to Madison
Avenue. In this novel, reflecting that shift, the world of the future-an
overcrowded, resources-starved future-is ruled by two rival advertising
agencies. Thematically related to the mainstream novel (and film) The
Hucksters, but carried out to a SATIRICreductio ad absurdem.Kornbluth
later stated that he and Pohl packed into this story everything they hated
about advertising, and it came out with Swiftian savagery. One of the
first novels by writers with primary roots in the pulps to make an impact
in mainstream circles, and, by mainstream measurements a bestseller. A
sequel by Pohl (after Kornbluth's death), is The Merchants' War (St.
Martin's, 1984); both are collected as Venus, Inc. (Nelson Doubleday,
1985).

Untouched by Human Hands
SHECKLEY, ROBERT(Ballantine, 1954)Sheckley's first story collection, and
a brilliant debut, contains "Seventh Victim," in which an otherwise
conventional near-future society sanctions the lethal but apparently
stress-reducing game of Hunter and Victim; it was made into an effective
movie, Tenth Victim. "The Monsters," a straight-faced exercise in cultural
relativism, has one of the most startling opening lines in all science
fiction (or, indeed, in all fiction). "Specialist" carries Adam Smith's
stodgy Division of Labor to its ultimate logical conclusion; "Cost of
Living" does the same with the problem, already severe in the 1950s, of
mounting consumer debt. The U.K. edition published by M. Joseph, 1955,
drops and replaces two stories. Sheckley's voice represented an early
break with, and fresh contrast to, the styles and themes of Golden Age SF.
Compare William Tenn, OF AII POSSIBLE WORLDS . Sheckley enthusiasts should
investigate The Collected Short Stories of Robert Sheckley, a five-volume
set issued in 1991. See also SATIRE

Of All Possible Worlds
TENN, WILLIAM (pseud. of Philip Klass)(Ballantine, 1955)Seven stories and
an essay, "On the Fiction in Science Fiction," in this first collection by
a writer with an even more savage wit than Robert Sheckley, if that be
possible. Memorable items include "Down Among the Dead Men," in which
recycled soldiers' corpses are fitted out to fight again because the world
is running out of cannon fodder; "The Custodian," a last-person-on-earth
story, sort of a jazz variant on Mary Shelley's The Last Man; and "The
Liberation of Earth," a sarcastic parable on the hapless fate of small
nations invaded and counterinvaded by ideologically well-intentioned
superpowers. A U.K. edition (M. Joseph, 1956) drops two stories and adds
three, including "Project Hush," a satire on the fetish of military
security, and "Party of the Two Parts," which makes fun of prurience from
an unusual angle. Those two stories may also be found in another U.S.
collection of Tenn's work, The Human Angle (Ballantine, 1956). See also
SATIRE

Ringworld
NIVEN, LARRY(Ballantine, 1970)An exploration team consisting of an exotic
mix of humans and aliens investigates a huge artifact occupying a
planetary orbit around a sun. A novel of imaginary tourism; its real hero
is the artifact, whose nature is further explored and explained in
Ringworld Engineers (1980). Compare Arthur C. Clarke's RENDEZVOUS WITH
RAMA. Hugo winner, 1971; Nebula winner, 1970. See also BIG DUMB OBJECTS

A Case of Conscience
BLISH, JAMES(Ballantine, 1958)Except at the simplest level (the overthrow
of the fundamentalist dictatorship in Robert A. Heinlein's "If This Goes
On-") RELIGION in Golden Age SF was almost as taboo a subject as sex.
(This is one more demonstration of difference between U.S. and U.K.
sensibilities; compare the serious theological argument of C. S. Lewis
and, in an entirely different way, of Olaf Stapledon.) James Blish tackled
the subject head-on. Lithia is a newly discovered planet whose intelligent
inhabitants have developed a culture that is completely ethical, rational,
and without religion. The very absence of visible moral evil in them makes
them, in the eyes of Jesuit priest/biologist Ramon Ruiz-Sanchez, creations
of the devil. He brings one of them in embryo back to Earth; it grows up
traumatized (by Earth's own moral evil?), creates social chaos, flees back
to Lithia followed by the priest, who exorcises the planet, which is
immediately (coincidentally?) destroyed. A rich, ambiguous, deep-cutting
probe into the most ultimate of concerns. HW, 1959

The Lovers
FARMER, PHILIP JOSe(Ballantine, 1961) Recommended ed.: Ballantine,
1979Expanded from a 1952 story in Fantasy & Science Fiction that provoked
controversy at the time for its SEXual content. Hero and his wife, on a
wretchedly overpopulated Earth ruled with fiendish ingenuity by an
oppressive state church (the "Sturch") that considers all sex evil except
for procreation, are-understandably!-unhappily married. Sent to help kill
off an intelligent insect-like race on a planet slated for colonization,
the man falls in love with a female of another alien species, which can
mimic human appearance and behavior up to and including sex, but the
consequences are tragic and horrible. Films like Alien and its sequels may
have taken the edge off the raw shock this story would have given some
readers a generation ago. Compare Gardner Dozois, Strangers; contrast
Lester del Rey, The Eleventh Commandment. See also BIOLOGY

Neutron Star
NIVEN, LARRY(Ballantine, 1968)The first collection of Niven's hard SF
stories, early works developing the Known Space future history. The title
story (Hugo winner, 1967) is one of several in which Beowulf Shaeffer is
blackmailed into taking on a dangerous mission in an exotic environment.
The bibliography of Niven's collections is complex, stories being
recombined into some later selections, but The Shape of Space (1969), All
the Myriad Ways (1971), and A Hole in Space (1974) preserve most of the
important early fiction. Tales of Known Space (1975) is useful for the
notes about the future-historical background. The title story of
Inconstant Moon (1973) (Hugo winner, 1972; also in All the Myriad Ways) is
a marvelously vivid story in which people on the night side of the world
realize that the sun has gone nova when the Moon becomes much brighter. A
more recent, but relatively minor collection is Limits (1985), which
includes a number of collaborative stories. N-Space (1990) and Playgrounds
of the Mind (1991) are retrospective collections covering Niven's entire
career. These volumes include essays, novel excerpts, appreciations by
other writers, and bibliographies, but leave out some of Niven's better
early stories. See also HISTORY IN SF

Startide Rising
BRIN, DAVID(Bantam,1983)The intelligent species of Earth (men, apes, and
dolphins) seem to be highly exceptional in having advanced to
technological sophistication without the alien Patrons that generally
supervise the "uplift" of sentient species throughout the galactic
culture. Now a dolphin-commanded starship has made a significant discovery
in deep space, but must take refuge in an alien ocean from its rivals.
While the dolphins struggle desperately to survive, the starships of a
number of alien races do battle overhead for the prize. Superior SPACE
OPERA of a very high order. Brin's "Uplift" universe was first introduced
in Sundiver (1980). Compare Larry Niven's Known Space series. Hugo winner,
1984; Nebula winner,1983

The Female Man
RUSS, JOANNA(Bantam, 1975)A contemporary woman encounters three
"alternative selves," including a version from the feminist utopia
Whileaway, a version from a world where patriarchy is more powerful and
more brutally imposed, and a version from a world where the sex war has
exploded into armed conflict. The juxtaposition of these alternatives,
phantasmagoric and very witty, provides an extraordinarily rich and
thought-provoking commentary on sexual politics. A key novel of feminist
SF. Compare Marge Piercy's WOMAN ON THE EDGE OF TIME and Josephine
Saxton's Queen of the States . See also FEMINISM

Venus of Dreams
SARGENT, PAMELA(Bantam, 1986)A long novel about the relationship between
two people involved in a project to terraform VENUS. The book is carefully
constructed and delicately handled, with some striking imagery to set off
the love story. The political background is complex. ln the sequel, Venus
of Shadows (1988), humans have descended to the partially terraformed
surface, living in domed cities. Although the settlers are able to control
the planet, they are unable to control themselves, and political and
religious rivalries begin to tear the colony apart. Compare Kim Stanley
Robinson's RED MARS .

Strange Invasion
KANDEL, MICHAEL(Bantam, 1989) Shapeshifting alien invaders turn Earth
into a tourist site, bizarrely unsettling the global political balance.
Wildly funny satire with a sting in its tail from the renowned English
translator of Stanislaw Lem. Contrast Fredric Brown's Martians, Go Home!
(1955). See also INVASION

Growing up Weightless
FORD, JOHN M. (Bantam, 1993)Thirteen-year-old Matt Ronay lives in a
crowded, complex lunar society, which enjoys the benefits of highly
advanced CYBERNETICS but is constrained by its limited water resources.
Matt is inventive and exceptionally bright, but lives in horror of his
father, a successful public figure who seems to Matt a kind of monster.
With his equally brilliant friends, Matt conspires to take an unauthorized
expedition to the far side of the MOON, a journey that tests his resources
and forces him to confront his fears and prejudices. Ford's vision of the
crowded, information-dense interstellar civilization is a dazzling one,
and his novel-narrated in one long scene, without breaks of any kind-is
demanding but exhilarating. Compare Robert A. Heinlein's THE MOON IS A
HARSH MISTRESS for a very different view of life on the Moon. (GF) See
also COMMUNICATIONS

In the Mothers' Land
VONARBURG, ELISABETH(Bantam, 1992)Vonarburg's second novel is set in the
same background as her first, the award-winning The Silent City, a world
devastated centuries earlier by ecological catastrophe, in which some
centers of high technology remain in enclaves amid pastoral wilderness.
The land of Bethaly is governed by a benign matriarchy, which deals with
the problems facing it-a paucity of fertile males; the threats posed by a
radiological Badlands nearby; an unexplained malady that kills most
children before their seventh birthdays-in ways that strike the reader as
both understandable and deeply strange. Lisbei grows to early adolescence
in a communal yet stratified society, first as a young child in the
"garderies" (where children are tended anonymously and left largely
untaught, so the society need not expend emotional and other resources on
charges who will soon die), then as an adolescent being groomed for high
administrative office, and then after as an itinerant young adult. Her
growth to adulthood affords the reader a comprehensive and complex tour of
the novel's imagined world. The most striking feature of In the Mothers'
Land is its dramatization of developing consciousness: long passages are
told through the point of view of Lisbei as a young child, who sees both
strange and mundane events as equally marvelous. Jane Brierley's excellent
translation conveys this Proustian language in lyrical English, making
Vonarburg's long novel a pleasure to read. Compare Kate Wilhelm's WHERE
LATE THE SWEET BIRDS SANG and C. J. Cherryh's CYTEEN. (GF) See also CANADA

Stranger in a Strange Land
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Putnam, 1961)Of all Heinlein's works this is the
best known. It reached large audiences farther away from his science
fiction roots than anything else he wrote, and inspired insurgencies both
right and left. An uncut version was issued posthumously by Putnam in
1991. The contradictory libertarian and authoritarian elements in this
writer are both present in the saga of Valentine Michael Smith, born
human, raised Martian, who returns to Earth a religious, political, and
sexual MESSIAH. The first third of the novel, set in one of Heinlein's
typically believable sociopolitical milieus (a world government that has
grown out of the present United Nations, with the secretary-general as its
focus) is well and suspensefully told. Soon thereafter, however, Heinlein
ascends into the pulpit where, sadly, this highly creative writer would
remain for the next quarter-century, preaching, with unfortunately few
lapses into good storytelling (that is, showing, not telling) such as The
Moon ls a Harsh Mistress. Stranger's cultural impact on an entire
generation is, nonetheless, undeniable. Hugo winner, 1961

The Ring of Ritornel
HARNESS, CHARLES L(EONARD)(Gollancz, 1968)A fine SPACE OPERA in which a
corrupt galactic empire faces apocalyptic destruction as the contending
forces of chance and destiny (personalized in rival deities) resolve their
conflict. Will the cosmos be reborn and renewed when the cycle ends? The
themes echoed here from the earlier Flight Into Yesterday (1953) recur in
Firebird (1981), and these three works are among the most stylish modern
space operas. Compare lan Wallace's Croyd series and Barrington J.
Bayley's The Pillars of Eternity (1982).

Impossible Things
WILLIS, CONNIE(Bantam, 1994)Willis became one of the most celebrated SF
authors of the 1980s, winning numerous awards for her scrupulously
crafted, emotionally intense fiction. Like her 1985 collection Fire Watch,
the present volume favors novelettes and novellas, often dealing with
"classic" SF themes- TIME TRAVEL or post-disaster stories-whose careful
treatment and low-keyed style belie their deep feeling and emotional
complexity. "The Last of the Winnebagoes" (Hugo winner, 1989; Nebula
winner, 1988) tells a complex story of guilt and recrimination in a near
future in which dogs have become extinct after a viral epidemic; the
seemingly prosaic theme in fact reinforces its powerful impact. Several of
the other stories approach farce; the best of them, "Even the Queen",
makes screwball comedy out of the subject of menstruation. (GF) See also
HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

The Sound of His Horn
SARBAN (pseud. of John W. Wall)(Davies, 1952) Recommended ed.:
Ballantine, 1960A British POW "escapes" from a Nazi prison camp into an
alternate future world in which the Nazis won World War II. Kingsley Amis
aptly pointed out in his introduction to this story that although most
U.S. SF dystopias of the 1950s (for example, those of Frederik Pohl and C.
M. Kornbluth) were urban in setting and tone, rural life can know horrors
of its own; in this case, a forested estate where feudal barons stage
great hunts with human beings as prey (hence the story's title, quoted
from the Scottish fox hunting ballad "John Peel"). An understated but
quite harrowing tale. Compare the even more chilling "Weihnachtsabend" by
Keith Roberts (in David Hartwell, World Treasury of Science Fiction );
contrast the Japanese-occupied San Francisco locale in Philip K. Dick, THE
MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE . See also HITLER WINS

Gateway
POHL, FREDERIK(St. Martin's, 1977)Mankind "inherits" the stars by finding
and exploiting (with considerable difficulty) the starships and gadgets
left behind by the alien Heechee. The flippant, guilt-ridden hero has
greatness thrust upon him by degrees as he picks up his winnings in the
game of Russian roulette that men must play in gaining control of the
Heechee artifacts. His luck continues to hold in Beyond the Blue Event
Horizon , which ends with his finding out why the Heechee ran away. This
is fine contemporary space opera, with some neatly ironic
characterization. Less successful are the later volumes in the series,
Heechee Rendezvous(1984), in which the aliens finally arrive on stage,
Annals of the Heechee (1987), and The Gateway Trip: Tales and Vignettes of
the Heechee (1990). Hugo winner, 1978; Nebula winner, 1977. See also BIG
DUMB OBJECTS

The Sirens of Titan
VONNEGUT, KURT(Dell, 1959)In this second novel Vonnegut took some of the
standard gambits of SF (time travel, interplanetary exploration, an
invasion from Mars) and put a reverse-English spin on them. This is not so
much a work of science fiction as a takeoff from, or jazz variation on,
the genre; this novel's closest kin in the modern period may be the works
of Douglas Adams. But Vonnegut is after bigger game than is Adams: "I was
a victim of a series of accidents," the story's stumbling hero proclaims.
"As are we all." Monuments on Earth and on Saturn's satellite Titan exist
only to convey a message from one galactic civilization to another; and
the message is utterly banal. The high "Tralfamadorian" culture that spans
all time simultaneously will reappear as the matrix for the adventures of
Billy Pilgrim in Vonnegut's most bitterly autobiographical novel,
SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE. The journeyings in this earlier work, from Earth to
Mars to Mercury to Titan, are not the jaunty adventures they would have
been in the pulp; they are darkly disturbing, which may be a reason
conventional science fictionists were slow to respond to this work. The
Dell paperback preceded hardcover publication by Houghton Mifflin (1961).
See also ABSURDIST SF

The Ophiuchi Hotline
VARLEY, JOHN(Dial, 1977) Contact with aliens at first brings new
opportunities, but then come the Invaders, determined to take over the
solar system and expel humankind. What future can there be for displaced
persons in the galactic civilization? Compare David Brin's STARTIDE
RISING. See also INVASION

In the Ocean of Night
BENFORD, GREGORY(Dial, 1977)A fix-up novel in which the hero looks for
evidence of the existence of aliens, and ultimately meets one; contact may
invigorate a world becoming gradually decadent. In a sequel, Across the
Sea of Suns (1984), the difficulty of coming to terms with alien beings,
and the necessity of so doing, lie at the heart of a complex plot
involving the confrontation of alternative human philosophies of life.
Thoughtful hard SF, its visionary element less wide-eyed than in Poul
Anderson's The Avatar and other like-minded works. See also ALIENS

Mission of Gravity
CLEMENT, HAL (pseud. of Harry Clement Stubbs)(Doubleday, 1954)Serialized
in Astounding (April, May, June, July 1953), this novel in its initial
form was accompanied by an article, "Whirligig World"(June, 1953;
reprinted in some later editions), in which Clement described how, in
consultation with Isaac Asimov and others, he concocted the planet on
which the story takes place. That is an accurate description of the way
writers like Clement work: get the science right and it will drive the
plot. But this is also a First Contact story of a very high order, between
explorers from Earth and a most unhuman sentient native species, to the
benefit of both; rejecting the cliche one still sees in movie and TV
science fiction that alienness equals evil. Clement stated on more than
one occasion that Mission of Gravitywas his personal philosophical bottom
line, and the novel deserves a careful reading not only for its scientific
ingenuity but for the working out of that philosophy. A major work. Sequel
is Star Light (Ballantine, 1971). Compare Robert L. Forward, DRAGON'S EGG
;Poul Anderson, The Enemy Stars . See also GRAVITY

Pilgrimage: The Book of the People
HENDERSON, ZENNA(Doubleday, 1961)Short stories that originally appeared
in Fantasy & Science Fiction, with connecting narrative. "The People" are
humans who came to Earth after their sun became a nova and went into
hiding. They have telepathy and telekinesis, which they use solely for
benevolent purposes and conceal most of the time lest they rouse hysteria
against them as "witches." The host culture they live among is southern
Appalachian, which Henderson understood and portrayed accurately and
sympathetically; reminiscent in that regard of the fantasy (not the SF) of
Manly Wade Wellman. Confrontations with Earth folk that endanger their
cover drive most of the story plots, which are saved from sentimentalism
by the People's realization that in any revelation of what they are their
existence may be at stake; compare Howard Fast, "The First Men," and
Wilmar H. Shiras, "In Hiding." A sequel is The People: No Different
Flesh(Gollancz, 1966). The saga of the People lent itself readily to a TV
series format, which aired in the 1970s. See also PSI POWERS

The Dragon in the Sea
HERBERT, FRANK(Doubleday, 1956) Variant titles: 21st Century Sub, (Avon,
1956); Under Pressure, (Ballantine, 1974)Originating as an Astounding
serial titled "Under Pressure," this was Herbert's maiden voyage, so to
speak. Far transcending its routine plot-a "subtug" seeks to steal oil
deposits from the unspecified enemy's continental shelf, with a crew, one
of whom must be a spy (shades of The Hunt for Red October!)-the story
conflates the deep, closed-in submarine environment with the crew members'
psychic stress; they are both materially and mentally "under pressure."
The seemingly half-mad captain has echoes of Captain Ahab, and there are
allusions also to the Book of Job and Freud. The writer who one day would
produce Dune was well on his way. See also PSYCHOLOGY and UNDER THE SEA

The Martian Chronicles
BRADBURY, RAY (Douglas)(Doubleday, 1950)U.K. title: The Silver Locusts
(Hart-Davis, 1951)Even after forty years there is Golden Age magic in The
Martian Chronicles. What Bradbury did in effect was transplant his boyhood
"Green Town, Illinois" to Mars, and there work out the two planets' tragic
but ultimately redemptive destiny. The stories worked together into this
book had been previously published in the 1940s; some in mainstream
magazines, most in SF pulps, notably Planet Stories. Several of the
chapters have been reprinted in The Stories of Ray Bradbury, but not all;
one notable omission, ". . . And the Moon Be Still as Bright," originally
in Thrilling Wonder Stories (June, 1948), contains the key to Bradbury's
entire argument. Conversely, expanded versions of The Martian Chronicles
published in 1963 (Time, Inc.) and 1977 (Doubleday), added other Mars
stories that had not been included in this initial edition, and such
stories do appear in the Stories. ln 1980 The Martian Chronicles was made
into an episodic, uneven, but at times highly effective TV miniseries,
starring Rock Hudson as the spaceship captain. By any measure this work is
a major landmark, both as SF and as literature. See also MARS

Novelty
CROWLEY, JOHN(Doubleday, 1989)This collection contains four stories, the
novella "Great Work of Time," and three shorter pieces, "In
Blue,""Novelty," and "The Nightingales Sing at Night.""Great Work of Time,
" winner of the 1990 World Fantasy Award and the centerpiece of the book,
is an ALTERNATE HISTORY story in which Cecil Rhodes, founder of Rhodesia,
also set up the Otherhood, a secret society of time travelers whose
purpose is to preserve the British Empire. Due to their meddling, England
wins World War I without help and dominates the world to this day.
Eventually, however, the Otherhood discovers that its present course will
lead to disaster and that, to save the Earth, the Empire must fall.
Crowley is one of science fiction's finest stylists and these stories are
a delight. Compare Michael Flynn's In the Country of the Blind (1990) and
Poul Anderson's Time Patrol (1991).

Lord of Light
ZELAZNY, ROGER (Doubleday, 1967)A colony world has used its powerful
technology to recreate Hindu culture, its elite assuming the roles of the
gods. The hero first rebels against these "gods" on their own terms, but
then opposes them more successfully with a new faith. Pyrotechnically
dramatic and imaginatively fascinating. The similar Creatures of Light and
Darkness (1969), which draws heavily on Egyptian MYTHOLOGY, is less
successful. Hugo winner, 1968

Nova
DELANY, SAMUEL R(AY)(Doubleday, 1968) A grail epic as space opera, whose
hero must trawl the core of an exploding star for the fabulous element
that is the power source of the galactic civilization. The most romantic
and action-packed of Delany's novels, but no less sophisticated for that.
Beautifully written. See also GALACTIC EMPIRES

What Mad Universe
BROWN, FREDRIC(Dutton, 1949)After a succession of well-crafted murder
mysteries this was Brown's first SF novel. The protagonist, a science
fiction magazine editor, is thrown into an alternate universe where space
travel was accidentally discovered in 1903 and General Eisenhower is
now-1949-leading a space war against invading Arcturans. In this universe
every cliche in pulp science fiction exists as a reality: bug-eyed
monsters, young women in see-through space suits, a superhero who is also
a scientific genius-and who turns out to be a particularly vapid and
obnoxious science fiction fan in "our" universe who had been writing nasty
letters to the editor-hero's magazine. Brown wrote this story before the
pulps were quite extinct, so the SATIRE had a recognizable bite. Vis-a-vis
science fiction in the visual media it still does. Compare Douglas Adams,
THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY ; contrast Harry Harrison, Bill, the
Galactic Hero (1965).

Inverted World
PRIEST, CHRISTOPHER(Faber, 1974)A city is subject to space-time
distortions that force its inhabitants to move it en masse, pursuing a
point of stability across a hyperbolic surface, although observers from
outside see it progressing across Europe. A fascinating juxtaposition of
incompatible worldviews, with some fine imagery in the description of the
hero's mission away from the city. Compare Philip K. Dick's Martian
Time-Slip . See also POCKET UNIVERSE

A Wrinkle in Time
L'ENGLE, MADELEINE(Farrar, 1962); Young adultMeg and Charles Wallace
Murray, along with Calvin, Meg's classmate, become involved in an attempt
to find Dr. Murray, a brilliant scientist who has mysteriously
disappeared. Under the direction of Mrs. Who, Mrs. Whatsit, and Mrs.
Which, three "angels," they "tesseract" to Camazotz, a distant star, where
the children must save Dr. Murray, held captive by "It" in Central
Intelligence. Eventually, it is the self-effacing love of Meg, and not the
brilliant intelligence of Charles, that saves their father. One of the
contemporary fantasy-science fiction novels that enmesh young people in
planetwide struggles between good and evil. Well written, firm
characterization, provocative themes. Contrast Robert A. Heinlein's The
Rolling Stones . Companion novels are A Wind in the Door (1973), in which
Charles Wallace's bloodstream becomes an arena for a clash between good
and evil; A Swiftly Tilting Planet (1978), in which an older Charles
Wallace, aided by Meg and the unicorn Gaudior, goes back in time to
resolve several moral crises and avert nuclear catastrophe; and An
Acceptable Time (1989). 1963 Newbery Award; 1965 Lewis Carroll Shelf
Award; 1965 Sequoyah Children's Book Award; 1980 American Book Award for A
Swiftly Tilting Planet. See also CHILDREN IN SF

Rogue Moon
BUDRYS, ALGIS(Gold Medal, 1960)This probes a major metaphysical problem
with the widely used SF concept of matter transmission ("beaming aboard,"
in Star Trek parlance): If a person is "scanned," sent in dissociated form
to wherever, and then reassembled, does not the scannee (from his/her own
point of view) cease to exist? In this instance a Moon-based receiver
merely duplicates the traveler, leaving the original on Earth, resulting
eventually in a situation in which the transportee must die, so that there
will not be two of him. Budrys cuts deeply into some age-old questions
about the nature of the self, or soul. But this is no abstract philosophic
discourse; the situation is handled with unsparing realism, and the
psychic aberrations of the major characters led James Blish to exclaim
when the book first came out that they were all certifiably insane. A
major work, well meriting its Hugo nomination and (in novella form) Nebula
Award. See also MATTER TRANSMISSION

I, Robot
ASIMOV, ISAAC(Gnome, 1950)Nine stories from early-forties Astounding,
which illustrate Asimov's (and, perhaps, John W. Campbell's) "three laws
of robotics." With the memorable exception of Eando Binder's "I, Robot"
(Amazing, 1939), this was the first major breakaway from the
ROBOTS-as-menace cliche; contrast Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley,
Frankenstein , Karel Capek, R.U.R. , and Miles J. Breuer, "Paradise and
Iron" (1930). Asimov broke with another genre cliche in this series by
introducing a high-powered scientific thinker who was not male, Dr. Susan
Calvin. Harlan Ellison wrote a film script from these early robot stories
of Asimov, structurally modeled on Citizen Kane, published serially in
Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, 1985; Ellison's adaptation of the
story "Liar!" is especially powerful. Asimov continued to write robot
stories throughout his life; many are collected in The Rest of the Robots
(Doubleday, 1964).

Rendezvous with Rama
CLARKE, ARTHUR C(HARLES)(Gollancz, 1973) A vast alien spaceship passes
through the solar system, using the Sun's gravity to boost its velocity.
Human explorers witness the brief blossoming of its artificial life
system, but do not meet its makers. Ten years later, in Rama II (1989) by
Clarke and Gentry Lee, a second spaceship repeats the maneuver and a
second group of human explorers is dispatched. When the Raman ship departs
the solar system, however, three of the explorers go along for the ride.
In Clarke and Lee's The Garden of Rama (1991), by far the most successful
of the two writers' collaborations, the three humans aboard the Raman
vessel spend 13 years on their journey. Not expecting to see Earth again,
they settle in, have babies, and explore in much greater depth. They also
meet other alien residents of the vessel, though not the Ramans
themselves. Eventually reaching a gigantic space station, they Iearn much
more about the Ramans, though enough mysteries remain for a promised
fourth volume. Compare Larry Niven's RINGWORLD and Bob Shaw's Orbitsville
for similarly charismatic artifacts. Hugo winner, 1974; Nebula winner
1973. See also BIG DUMB OBJECTS

Golden Witchbreed
GENTLE, MARY(Gollancz, 1983)Lynne Christie, envoy of Earth Dominion, has
been sent to Orthe to determine whether its humanoid inhabitants are ready
for diplomatic and economic relations. She discovers a complex world with
factions both friendly to and hostile to her goal. Gentle's Orthe is a
superb example of world building, comparable in many ways to Frank
Herbert's DUNE or Ursula K. Le Guin's THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS . Compare
also C. J. Cherryh's THE FADED SUN . The excellent sequel is Ancient Light
(1987). See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

The Embedding
WATSON, IAN(Gollancz, 1973)An intricately constructed novel about the
power of language to contain and delimit "reality." It features an
experiment in which children are taught an artificial language to alter
their perception of the world; an Amerindian tribe whose use of
psychotropic drugs is associated with transformations of their native
tongue; and alien visitors who seek to understand humans via their
communicative artifacts. Original and mind stretching, something of an
imaginative tour de force. Compare Samuel R. Delany's BABEL-17. See also
LINGUISTICS

The Difference Engine
GIBSON, WILLIAM, and BRUCE STERLING(Gollancz, 1990)The Victorian
scientist Charles Babbage designed a primitive but workable mechanical
computer. He never built it, of course, but what if he had? The novel
postulates an enormously accelerated Industrial Revolution fueled by
construction of gigantic Babbage machines and, as a result, a social
revolution as well. Lord Byron, leader of the Industrial Radical party,
has become Prime Minister, and the country is largely run by a
science-based meritocracy. Against this wonderfully complex backdrop, the
authors work a fairly straightforward mystery plotline. It seems that a
valuable deck of programming cards has been stolen and a variety of
powerful people are willing to do virtually anything to recover them. One
of the joys of this rather erudite novel lies in spotting the many
historical personages and figuring out exactly how their lives have
changed. Compare Michael Flynn's use of the Babbage machine in In the
Country of the Blind (1990). See also STEAMPUNK

On Wings of Song
DISCH, THOMAS M(ICHAEL)(St. Martin's, 1979)The hero, growing up in the
ideologically repressive Midwest, yearns to learn the art of "flying," by
which talented individuals can sing their souls out of their bodies. He
loses his freedom, his wife, and his dignity to this quest, but in a
cruelly ambiguous climax might have achieved an absurd triumph. Clever and
compelling; a disturbing satire subverting SF myths of transcendence.
Contrast STARDANCE by Spider and Jeanne Robinson and Arthur C. Clarke's
CHILDHOOD'S END. See also ARTS

Roderick
SLADEK, JOHN T(HOMAS)(Granada, 1980) Original U.S. edition (1982) was
abridged, but 1987 reprint was completeFirst part of a two-decker novel
completed in Roderick at Random (1983). A satirical bildungsroman in which
the title character, a ROBOT, slowly develops through eccentric infancy to
detached maturity while various enemies attempt to locate and destroy him.
Very funny, picking up themes from The Reproductive System in presenting
its satirical account of man/machine relationships but extrapolating them
to new extremes. If Roderick is the epitome of the good robot, his
opposite is found in Sladek's Tik-Tok (1983). Tik-Tok is a robot whose
"asimov circuits" malfunction, allowing him to become as morally defective
as the humans who made him and thus enabling him to build a spectacular
career for himself. A fine black comedy. Compare David Gerrold's When
HARLIE Was One .

Star Man's Son: 2250 A.D.
NORTON, ANDRE (pseud. of Alice Mary Norton)(Harcourt, 1952) Variant
title: Daybreak 2250 A.D.; Young adultRejected by his father's clan, young
Fors, a mutant, runs away to prove himself a Star Man, or explorer. Along
with Arskane, a black youth who befriends him, Fors is successful in
uniting the several clans against their common enemy, the Beast Things,
and in instilling in the former the dream of starting over without
repeating the mistakes of the Old Ones. The author's first SF novel, one
of her best, both a fine study of coming of age and a convincing portrait
of postholocaust world. Compare Robert A. Heinlein's Farmer in the Sky or
Red Planet (1949). See also CHILDREN IN SF

Graybeard
ALDISS, BRIAN W(ILSON)(Faber, 1964)Unwise experimentation with nuclear
devices has led to the sterilization of mankind, and there seems to be no
hope for the future. The central characters, waiting for the END, consider
the ironies and frustrations of their situation. A key work in the
tradition of British disaster stories. Compare F. Wright Moxley's Red Snow
(1930) for an earlier variation of the theme.

Heroes and Villains
CARTER, ANGELA(Heinemann, 1969)After the HOLOCAUST, the flame of culture
and learning is kept alight by Professors guarded by Soldiers, while
barbarians and mutants threaten to extinguish it. The heroine, a
Professor's daughter, runs off with a barbarian and enjoys her just
desserts. A strange combination of the Iyrical, the ironic, and the
author's usual flirtation with horrors.

The Time Machine
WELLS, H(ERBERT) G(EORGE)(Heinemann, 1895) The Definitive Time Machine,
ed. by Harry M. Geduld, Indiana Univ. Press, 1987Critics have emphasized
the splitting of humanity into the Eloi and Morlocks so much as Wells's
vision of the outcome of the Marxist class struggle that its implication,
taken from Thomas Huxley, that humanity cannot control the cosmic
EVOLUTIONary process, and is, therefore, its victim, has not been
adequately emphasized. One should not overlook the fact that the book's
climax is the vivid scene of the dying Earth. It must be read as being
extremely pessimistic. The final speech of the traveler reveals the inner
tensions within Wells that may explain why he turned increasingly to a
heavy didacticism. See also TIME TRAVEL

The Handmaid's Tale
ATWOOD, MARGARET(McClelland & Stewart, 1985) DYSTOPIAn novel of a world
ruled by militaristic fundamentalism in which sexual pleasure is
forbidden. Conception and childbirth have become difficult and the
handmaid of the title belongs to a specialist breeding stock. The story is
annotated by a historian in a further future, whose shape is not revealed.
The 1990 film was somewhat sterile. Compare John Wyndham's "Consider Her
Ways" (1956) and Suzy McKee Charnas's WALK TO THE END OF THE WORLD.

The Atrocity Exhibition
BALLARD, J(AMES) G(RAHAM)(Cape, 1970)U.S. title: Love and Napalm: Export
U.S.A. (1972)A series of "condensed novels"-collages of images presenting
a kaleidoscopic pattern of 20th century myths and motifs, particularly
those that dominated the 1960s. Political assassinations, customized cars,
the space program, the arms race, the media as brokers of celebrity-all
are juxtaposed here in a nightmarish panorama of a culture out of control,
subject to a cancerous malaise. Compare William S. Burroughs's Nova
Express. See also NEW WAVE and MEDIA LANDSCAPE

Riddley Walker
HOBAN, RUSSELL(Cape, 1980) A POSTHOLOCAUST story in which gunpowder is
rediscovered but set aside by the naively wise hero, who believes that
mankind must find a new path of progress this time. The first-person
narrative is presented in the decayed and transfigured dialect of the day
and represents a fascinating linguistic experiment. Compare Brian W.
Aldiss's Barefoot in the Head.

Out of the Silent Planet
LEWIS, C(LIVE) S(TAPLES)(Bodley Head, 1938)This was the initial volume of
Lewis's acclaimed Space Trilogy, which constitutes as a whole a highly
sophisticated Christian rebuttal to the worldview-today called "secular
humanism"-of H. G. Wells. The religious dimension is least evident in this
first volume, set on a well-realized, ecologically distinctive Mars. It is
more so in the second, Perelandra (Bodley Head, 1943; variant title Voyage
to Venus, Pan, 1953), in which the Garden of Eden temptation is replayed
on a marvelously described ocean-covered Venus (this time humankind does
not fall), and centrally so in the third, That Hideous Strength (Bodley
Head, 1945; abridged as The Tortured Planet, Avon, 1958), which angered
some American science fictionists when it first appeared because they
misread it as an attack on science. Lewis's actual target was scientism.
The trilogy has been compared to J. R. R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, but
that would be to throw it into a "heroic fantasy" mold, which really does
not fit. It can, however, be contrasted with James Blish's religious
fantasies such as Black Easter (Doubleday, 1968) and The Day After
Judgment(Doubleday, 1971). See also RELIGION

A Canticle for Leibowitz
MILLER, WALTER M(ICHAEL), JR. (Lippincott, 1960)Novelized from three F &
SF stories in the fifties; happily, the seams do not show. The Earth
plunges into a new dark age after nuclear war. Scientists, scapegoats
blamed for the war, flee to monasteries, which shelter them; as in the
previous downfall, the one coherent surviving social institution is the
Catholic church. A new Renaissance, in a context of warfare between
city-states, sees the rediscovery of electricity and, as an inescapable
consequence, weapons development. Still later, a new high-tech
civilization falls once again into nuclear war, although missionaries on a
starship that got away will plant a new, autonomous church on a far
planet. Bare-bones criticism cannot do justice to this outstanding work;
it must be read, or rather experienced. Compare Orson Scott Card, Folk of
the Fringe (1989), for a different church as the chrysalis of a new
civilization. Hugo winner, 1960. See also HOLOCAUST AND AFTER and RELIGION

334
DISCH, THOMAS M(ICHAEL)(MacGibbon & Kee, 1972)A dystopian vision of
future New York, focusing on various residents of a huge apartment house
and other parties interested in it. A brilliant work, utterly convincing
in its portraits of people trying to get by in a world they are powerless
to influence or control. The most eloquent display of the pessimism that
became newly acceptable in New Wave SF. Compare John Brunner's STAND ON
ZANZIBAR. See also ARTS

A Princess of Mars
BURROUGHS, EDGAR RICE(McClurg, 1917)Published under the pseudonym Norman
Bean as "Under the Moons of MARS" in All-Story (1912), A Princess of Mars
introduces Burroughs's most epic adventure and his finest imaginary world,
Barsoom, a construct based loosely on Percival Lowell's theories. Against
a dying planet torn by strife, John Carter fights his way across the
deserts, gaining the friendship of such warriors as Tars Tarkas of Thark
and the love of the incomparable Dejah Thoris, princess of Helium. They
live happily for nine years until by accident Carter ends up on Earth at
the cave where he escapes marauding Apaches by willing himself to Mars.
The Gods of Mars (1918) and The Warlord of Mars (1919), both seeing
magazine publication in 1914, complete the personal saga of Carter. Eight
other novels follow the adventures of his family and friends. This first
novel introduced the conventions Burroughs used throughout his various
series, including some of the tales of Tarzan, but no other series proved
so effective. Permutations of Barsoom survive in the worlds of "swords and
sorcery" so popular in contemporary SF.

A Voyage to Arcturus
LINDSAY, DAVID(Methuen, 1920)A classic allegorical romance in which the
landscapes and inhabitants of the planet Tormance provide an
externalization of the moral and metaphysical questions that preoccupied
the author. Its incarnate theological system influenced C. S. Lewis's Out
of the Silent Planet, and it also bears some similarity to George
Macdonald's Lilith (1895), although it is very much a work sui generis.
Lindsay's other metaphysical fantasies belong to the same species as
Charles Williams's theological fantasies, but generally find Christian
theology inadequate to their purpose (an exception is the posthumously
published novel The Violet Apple, 1978). Devil's Tor (1932) is a
particularly fine novel in this vein. See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

Last and First Men
STAPLEDON, (WILLIAM) OLAF(Methuen, 1930)An "essay in myth creation"
documenting the entire future history of the human race and its lineal
descendants. The "eighteenth men," living nearly 2 billion years in the
future, look forward with equanimity to the end of the story. The book has
dated somewhat, not just because its early chapters have been superseded,
but also because evolutionary biology has advanced since the 1920s;
nevertheless, it remains something of a masterpiece. The immediate sequel,
however-Last Men in London(1932)-is less impressive, involving an
elaborate commentary on the contemporary world from the imaginary
viewpoint of one of the eighteenth men. The 1988 J. P. Tarcher reprint of
Last and First Men includes a foreword by Greg Benford and an afterword by
Doris Lessing. See also GENETIC ENGINEERING

A Woman of the Iron People
ARNASON, ELEANOR(Morrow 1991)Co-winner of the first annual James Tiptree
Award for science fiction, which examines problems of gender. An
ANTHROPOLOGICAL team from Earth discovers an alien society where women
create all culture and technology, while men live in primitive style on
the fringes of civilization. Compare Sheri S. Tepper's THE GATE TO WOMEN'S
COUNTRY and Pamela Sargent's VENUS OF DREAMS for other variations on this
idea.

The Essential Ellison: a 35-Year Retrospective
ELLISON, HARLAN(Nemo Press, 1987) Ed. by Terry Dowling, Richard Delap,
and Gil LamontMore than one thousand pages of Ellison's work as a science
fiction and fantasy writer, essayist, screenwriter, television and film
critic, and all-purpose social commentator. Most of the classics and award
winners are here, including "Pretty Maggie Moneyeyes," "I Have No Mouth
and I Must Scream," "'Repent Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman," "A Boy and
His Dog," and "Deathbird." Less well known are some of Ellison's earlier
stories and his nonfiction. See also FABULATION

Gather, Darkness!
LEIBER, FRITZ (REUTER)(Pellegrini & Cudahy, 1950)This was first a serial
in Astounding in 1943, and built on the religious dictatorship theme
pioneered by Robert Heinlein in "If This Goes On-" (Revolt in 2100, in The
Past Through Tomorrow). Unlike the fundamentalist Protestant regime
envisioned by Heinlein the structure of this one is basically Catholic,
although with the magazine taboos of the time Leiber was careful to fuzz
the details. His real innovation, which drives the plot, is a
revolutionary underground whose goal is the restoration of political and
particularly scientific freedom, but which wraps itself in the trappings
of Satanism, complete with witches who zap around on jet-propelled
broomsticks. A brainwashing of the hero that temporarily recruits him into
the power elite he opposes ("memory can link anything") raises darker
issues of social control, although at the end of the story the forces of
enlightenment do prevail. Compare Lester del Rey, The Eleventh Commandment
. See also RELIGION

The Road to Corlay
COWPER, RICHARD (pseud. of John Middleton Murry, Jr.)(Gollancz, 1978)The
first of three novel-length sequels to the fine novella, "Piper at the
Gates of Dawn" , which deals with the revival of a heretical cult in a
post HOLOCAUST Britain dominated by oppressive religious orthodoxy. The
cult, organized around the symbol of the White Bird of Kinship, enjoys the
advantage that its most talented members can invoke and use a paranormal
empathy, often associated with music. In A Dream of Kinship (1981) the
cult has been transformed by the passing of centuries into an alternative
orthodoxy, but in A Tapestry of Time (1982) it undergoes a further
renewal. The books are Iyrical fantasies affirming the author's conviction
that it is spiritual rather than technological development that truly
constitutes human progress. U.S. editions include"Piper at the Gates of
Dawn" as a prelude. Compare Ursula K. Le Guin's ALWAYS COMING HOME .

The Island of Doctor Death and Other Stories and Other Stories
WOLFE, GENE(Pocket Books,1980)Collection, including the title story and a
novella that inverts its themes, "The Death of Doctor Island" (Nebula
winner, 1973). They deal with the subtle interaction of "private"
fictional worlds and "public" real ones. Wolfe is playing, as in The Fifth
Head of Cerberus, with relationships between appearance and reality more
subtle and mystifying than those to be found in such Philip Dick novels as
Martian Time-Slip and DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?. This
preoccupation recurs in many of his other stories. Later Wolfe
collections, all of them excellent, include Gene Wolfe's Book of Days
(1981), Storeys From the Old Hotel (1988),Endangered Species (1989), and
Castle of Days (1992). See also FABULATION

The Man in the High Castle
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)(Putnam, 1962)An alternate history in which Germany
and Japan won World War II and partitioned the United States, except for
the Rocky Mountain States, which were left in a kind of political limbo.
Faction-ridden Nazism oppressively rules the Eastern United States (and is
exploring Mars); the West Coast, however, and its Japanese overlords are
working out a modus vivendi, exchanging Oriental and American cultural
values. In this cosmos an underground novel circulates, in which the
Allies won the war; but, characteristic of Dick's layers-within-layers
approach to "reality," it is not quite our history. Dick stated that at
crucial turning points in the plot he, the author, used I Ching to decide
what his character would do next, and it may be a testament to that kind
of divination that at the end everything does come out in the wash, sort
of. This is Dick's most important early book. Younger readers may need to
have identified for them the various World War II Nazi leaders who on this
alternate time track were still around in 1962. Compare Gregory Benford
and Martin H. Greenberg, Hitler Victorious. Hugo winner, 1962. See also
HITLER WINS and ALTERNATE WORLDS

Who?
BUDRYS, ALGIS(Pyramid, 1958)They did not call them " CYBORGS" when this
story was written; Budrys blended that theme with the competitive
dehumanization inherent in the Cold War. A scientist of humble immigrant
origins-a status in itself sufficient to make him suspect in some
paranoid, subversiveness-haunted minds-is injured in a laboratory accident
and falls into Soviet hands. The Russians equip him with a metal face and
other mechanical parts. He returns to the United States and is forbidden
to continue his research on the ground that nobody can prove who he really
is. A strong indictment of the idiocies dignified at that time (and to a
great extent still today) as "security," but a parable also of
estrangement and alienation more generally. Compare Bernard Wolfe's LIMBO.

Limbo
WOLFE, BERNARD(Random, 1952)U.K. title: Limbo 90 (Secker, 1953)
Recommended ed.: Carroll & Graf, 1987Hailed as America's answer to the two
greatest British dystopias,Nineteen Eighty-Fourand Brave New World, this
remarkable novel blends satire, Freudian psychoanalysis, outrageous puns,
literary allusions, and straight-line scientific and technical
extrapolation. After World War III, allegedly pacifist regimes come to
power in what is left of the United States and the U.S.S.R., based on
voluntary quadruple amputation. The assumption is that people cannot march
against each other if they have no legs; to disarm is necessary,
literally, to dis-arm. Of course, as a doctor learns who returns to this
mad culture after 18 years on a remote island, the actual state of affairs
is not one of peace and joy. All that was dysfunctional in the world of
1950 as Wolfe saw it is carried forward forty years into an appalling
future, including a truly dismal forecast of the future of sex. Although
lapsing at times into didacticism, especially toward the conclusion, the
narrative is hard-driving and dramatic. The "author's notes" in the 1987
reprint describing the intellectual influences upon him when he wrote the
story include both Norbert Wiener and A. E. van Vogt! By any measure,
including that of "mainstream" literature, this is a major achievement.
See also DYSTOPIAS

Man Plus
POHL, FREDERIK(Random, 1976)The protagonist is technologically adapted
for life on MARS. The process by which he is made into an alien is
revealed, ironically, to be part of a plan to save humanity from the
coming self-destruction of a nuclear war. A convincing and critical
reexamination of the theme of Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles. A
less successful sequel, Mars Plus (1994), was outlined by Pohl and written
by Thomas J. Thomas. Nebula winner, 1977

Player Piano
VONNEGUT, KURT(Scribner, 1952) Variant title: Utopia 14, Bantam, 1954.It
used to be called "technological unemployment"; then "automation"; now,
euphemistically, "job displacement." Vonnegut in this first novel
realistically traced the personal and political consequences of such
transformation, with most working people forced into a future WPA while
the upper class languishes in the vapid corporate culture of William C.
Whyte's The Organization Man. In his opposition to replacing people with
machines, the rebellious hero identifies with the Luddites of the
Industrial Revolution and with the native Americans' last Ghost Dance
uprising: quixotic, but necessary "for the record." The story has touches
of the absurdism that would become manifest in Vonnegut's later work, but
on the whole it can be read simply as science fictional extrapolation into
a quite possible future. Compare Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth, THE
SPACE MERCHANTS. See also SATIRE

The Fifth Head of Cerberus
WOLFE, GENE(Scribner, 1972)Three linked novellas forming a coherent whole
(whose coherence has not been obvious to all readers). The key issue is
the identity of the main characters. One is a boy who is the latest in a
series of CLONES whose failure to achieve success in life has become the
focal point of obsessive "self"-examination; the other is apparently an
anthropologist who offers a strange "reconstruction" of the life of the
alien aborigines that were supposedly wiped out by human colonists but
actually used their shape-shifting powers to mimic and displace the humans
(including the anthropologist). A supremely delicate exercise in narrative
construction; not easy to follow, but one of the true classics of SF.

Nineteen Eighty-Four
ORWELL, GEORGE (pseud. of Eric Arthur Blair)(Secker, 1949)One of the
greatest novels of the 20th century, which anti-SF critics still insist is
not science fiction. Although British in flavor, this is a universal
future projection of the totalitarian state: its nature, purposes, and
prospects. Plotted like a suspenseful pulp thriller, but with characters
with whom the reader empathizes, it carries one along to its last ironic
line. And it should be read that way, freshly, even though a substantial
cottage industry of criticism has grown up around it like suburbs at the
base of a lofty mountain. The fact that the actual year 1984 came and
found not a Big Brother watching in London but an indulgent and
inattentive Old Uncle in Washington does not diminish the importance of
the warning; eternal vigilance, well before the event, is still the price
of liberty. This story was made into an effective motion picture in which
Richard Burton played his last screen role as the inquisitor, O'Brien.
Compare Aldous Huxley, BRAVE NEW WORLD, and Damon Knight, HELL'S PAVEMENT
. See also POLITICS

The Demolished Man
BESTER, ALFRED(Shasta, 1953)A Freudian-tinged murder mystery given a
science fictional spin: how does one premeditate a murder, knowing that
police detectives are all telepaths, and expect to get away with it? A
convincing portrait of how a society of mutual mind readers might actually
function. Tricks of typography on the page, showing for example the
interweaving of thought-conversations at a telepaths' cocktail party,
further the impact of this first novel by Bester. Written in close
consultation with Galaxy editor Horace Gold-as much a midwife of ideas, in
a different way, as John Campbell-this story richly earned its Hugo for
Best Novel, in the first year that prize was awarded. Compare Robert
Silverberg, Dying Inside. Hugo winner, 1952. See also CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
and PSI POWERS

The Forever War
HALDEMAN, JOE(St. Martin's, 1975)Fix-up novel of interstellar WAR against
hive-organized aliens. Realistic descriptions of military training and
action, with interesting use of relativistic time distortions. A reprise
of and ideological counterweight to Robert A. Heinlein's STARSHIP TROOPERS
. Compare also Orson Scott Card's ENDER'S GAME . Hugo winner, 1976

The Lost Face: Best Science Fiction From Czechoslovakia
NESVADBA, JOSEF(Taplinger, 1971) Trans. by Iris Urwin)Most of these
stories were published in a Czech magazine; this translation dates from
1964 and was issued in the United Kingdom as In the Steps of the
Abominable Snowman (Gollancz, 1970). Science fiction with an East European
accent, but drawing upon the Anglo-American SF tradition also. One story,
"Dr. Moreau's Other Island," is a variant on one of H. G. Wells's grimmer
tales, and another owes much to Tarzan-and-Jane. Two-"Expedition in the
Opposite Direction," a time travel story, and "The Lost Face," about some
startling consequences of plastic surgery-deal in fresh ways with the
perennial question of determinism versus freedom of the will. In that
discussion, Marxist considerations are minimal; the only figure in the
book who quotes Engels (in the time travel story) is a rather
unsympathetic character. The stories are told with verve, humanity, and
wit. See also APES AND CAVEMEN

Wild Seed
BUTLER, OCTAVIA(Doubleday, 1980)The first story in Butler's Patternist
series in terms of internal chronology, though not in terms of
publication. In ancient Africa, Doro, an immortal telepath, begins the
work of genetic manipulation that will help him create an empire. Doro's
work comes to apparent fruition with the creation of his telepathic
daughter, Mary, in Mind of My Mind (1977). In Patternmaster (1976) we see
an entire telepathic society. Survivor (1978) is another book in this
well-done series. Although Clay's Ark (1984) is not a Patternist novel, it
explores similar themes. Compare Theodore Sturgeon's MORE THAN HUMAN. See
also GENETIC ENGINEERING

Human Error
PREUSS, PAUL(Tor, 1985)A biologist and a computer scientist combine their
artistry to produce a powerful biochip microcomputer. Inevitably, though,
the potential of the new creation extends far beyond the purpose for which
it was intended. Not as apocalyptic as Greg Bear's BLOOD MUSIC but very
effective in its fashion. See also NANOTECHNOLOGY

Take Back Plenty
GREENLAND, COLIN(Unwin, 1990)This sophisticated and enormously funny
postmodernist SPACE OPERA owes a debt not only to the pulp tradition, but
also to Lewis Carroll. Tabitha Jute, a free-lance space trucker with a
penchant for partying and choosing unsuitable lovers, is hired to
transport a rather shady troupe of entertainers from the decaying space
habitat Plenty to the surface of Titan. The entertainers, however, are not
what they claim to be, and Tabitha soon finds herself up to her neck in
intrigue. Compare lain M. Banks's The Player of Games.

Worlds
HALDEMAN, JOE(Viking, 1981)The first volume of a trilogy, followed by
Worlds Apart (1983). Earth lurches toward World War III, after which
devastation the future of humankind will become dependent on the society
of the "Worlds"-orbital space colonies. Near-future realism combined with
loosely knit action-adventure. The long-delayed and very well done
concluding volume, Worlds Enough and Time (1992), describes the difficult
journey of one of those colonies to another star system. Compare Ben
Bova's Colony. See also SPACE HABITATS

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
ADAMS, DOUGLAS(Pan, 1979)Adaptation of a much-loved and very funny
British radio series. Earth is demolished to make way for a new
hyperspatial bypass, but the hero stows away on a starship with a reporter
for the eponymous reference book. Their outrageous extraterrestrial
adventures are part SATIRE, part slapstick. The Restaurant at the End of
the Universe (1980) completed the adaptation of the original radio
scripts, but Adams then added Life, the Universe and Everything (1982), So
Long, and Thanks for All the Fish (1984), and Mostly Harmless (1992).
Although all five books sold well, the later volumes seem less inspired
and tend increasingly toward dark humor and irony. Readers who can't get
enough of this series should investigate Neil Gaiman's Don't Panic: The
Official Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Companion (1988). Compare Robert
Sheckley's Options (1975).

Helliconia Spring
ALDISS, BRIAN W(ILSON)(Cape, 1982)The first volume in a trilogy continued
in Helliconia Summer (1983) and Helliconia Winter (1985). Helliconia is a
planet whose sun eccentrically orbits a much brighter star and thus has a
"great year" extending over hundreds of generations. Its societies undergo
vast changes, interrupted by periodic plagues, and the relationship
between humans and the cold-loving phagors also alters dramatically.
Observers from Earth watch with interest from an orbital station and relay
the story of one great year back to an avid audience on Earth. The
dedication states that the trilogy takes up themes from Aldiss's non-SF
novel Life in the West (1980) in attempting to analyze the "malaise" from
which our time is suffering. Superb world-building SF. Compare Paul Park's
Starbridge Chronicles and Michael Swanwick's STATIONS OF THE TIDE. See
also PLANETARY ROMANCE

The Boat of a Million Years
ANDERSON, POUL(Tor, 1989)Through the ages random genetic mutation has
bestowed IMMORTALITY on a small number of human beings. Beginning in 310
B.C., Anderson chronicles the lives of a number of such immortals, some
who partake in society, some who remain aloof from it. Eventually, tiring
of an Earth that has grown too tame, the immortals build a starship and go
off to explore the universe. Although the novel is a bit rambling,
Anderson's historical detail is endlessly fascinating. Compare Roger
Zelazny's THIS IMMORTAL.

The Enemy Stars
ANDERSON, POUL(Lippincott, 1959) Recommended ed.: Berkley, 1979Serialized
in Astounding in 1958 as "We Have Fed Our Sea" (a title derived from a
Kipling poem that is quoted effectively at the story's conclusion), this
is Anderson at his tragic-heroic best, blending meticulous astrophysics
with brooding romanticism. Four astronauts-Japanese, Russian,
Australasian, North European (with the fascinating projected futures of
their respective cultures deftly sketched in)-are, in the Star Trek sense,
"beamed aboard" an ion-drive spacecraft in orbit around a dark star, whose
unexpectedly powerful magnetic field cripples both the ship and their
means of escape from it. Working against a dwindling stock of rations to
make repairs, each crew member in the face of death must come to terms
with the universe and with personal fate. The 1979 revision updated the
science. Compare Algis Budrys, ROGUE MOON. See also MATTER TRANSMISSION

The Complete Stories
ASIMOV, ISAAC(Doubleday, 1990-1992)Volume one assembles 46 stories from
three Asimov collections, Earth Is Room Enough (1957), Nine Tomorrows
(1957), and Nightfall and Other Stories (1959). Although not everything
here is memorable, there are a number of excellent pieces, including two
of the author's own favorite short stories, "The Last Question" and "The
Ugly Little Boy," plus the classic "Nightfall" and"Dreaming Is a Private
Thing." Volume two collects an additional 40 stories. See also GOLDEN AGE
OF SF

The Gods Themselves
ASIMOV, ISAAC(Doubleday, 1972)A novel reflecting Asimov's fascination
with the sociology of science, reminiscent in parts of J. D. Watson's The
Double Helix (1968). The energy crisis is "solved" by pumping energy from
a parallel universe, whose alien inhabitants must try to communicate with
humans in order to tell them that both races are in deadly peril. Written
with a verve and economy that are missing from Asimov's later novels.
Compare Bob Shaw's A Wreath of Stars (1976). Hugo winner, 1973; Nebula
winner, 1972. See also ALTERNATE WORLDS

Through Darkest America
BARRETT, JR., NEAL(Congdon and Weed, 1986)When his isolated farm is
destroyed and his family is murdered, young Howie Ryder sets off to seek
revenge. As he travels across a continent still recovering from a nuclear
war in the past, Howie discovers a horrifying world of
government-sanctioned cannibalism, slavery, and child abuse. This is one
of the bleakest and most powerful post- HOLOCAUST novels ever written.
Dawn's Uncertain Light (1989) is a competent, but somewhat less harrowing
sequel. Compare Walter M. Miller, Jr.'s A CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ and Edgar
Pangborn's DAVY.

Timescape
BENFORD, GREGORY(Simon & Schuster, 1980)As the world lurches toward
disaster, scientists in 1998 try to transmit a warning message to 1962 by
means of tachyons. Their story is told in parallel with that of the
scientists trying to decode the transmission, and the two plots converge
on the possibility of paradox. Unusual for the realism of its depiction of
scientists at work; admirably serious in handling the implications of its
theme. Compare Carter Scholz and Glen A. Harcourt's Palimpsests (1985).
Nebula winner, 1980. See also TIME TRAVEL

The Great Short Fiction of Alfred Bester
BESTER, ALFRED(Berkley, 1976) 2 vols., titled The Light Fantastic and
Star Light, Star BrightSixteen stories from 1941 to 1974 in this author's
distinctive style. The earliest is his somber "Adam and No Eve."
Significant headnotes to each story describe the circumstances and
emotions surrounding its composition, although as a good Freudian Bester
warns against drawing causal inferences; at the time of writing, your
rational composing mind doesn't know what your unconscious is doing. Time
travel especially engaged Bester, as in "Hobson's Choice,""Of Time and
Third Avenue," and "The Men Who Murdered Mohammed." But here also are
"Time ls the Traitor" (1953)-not time travel, despite the title, but a
wildly neurotic love story; "Fondly Fahrenheit" (1954); and "They Don't
Make Life Like They Used To" (1963), which in tone and temper came close
to the verge of SF's modern period. Bester concluded the collection with a
wry, lively, informative essay, "My Affair With Science Fiction."
================================================ The Stars My Destination
BESTER, ALFRED(Signet, 1958) Brit. title:Tiger! Tiger! (Sidgwick,
1956)Although the magazine serial version (in Galaxy) and the U.S. edition
were both titled The Stars My Destination, the U.K. title, with its
allusion to Blake, is far more apt. The character "burning bright/ln the
forest of the night" is Gully Foyle, the protagonist of an
escape-from-prison story Bester said he modeled on The Count of Monte
Cristo. But this story veers in a different direction; whereas the Count's
dominant motive after his prison break is to wreak vengeance on the men
who framed him, Foyle's is to undercut the entire rapacious class system
that brutalized him, by bringing to all humankind the power to
teleport-"jaunt," in the story's jargon-anywhere in the universe. The
author, in the concluding essay to his short story collection called this
character an "antihero," contrasting with the cleancut "Doc" Srmith type;
however, Gully Foyle is perhaps more accurately seen as a proletarian hero
in the tradition of Victor Hugo. Texts of the U.S. and U.K. editions
differ. See also SUPERMAN

The Best of James Blish
BLISH, JAMES(Del Rey, 1979)This posthumous collection draws upon all of
Blish's earlier story collections, assembling a dozen stories and an essay
to show the full range of Blish's work. "Surface Tension," Blish's famous
story of microscopic humans building a two-inch-long wooden "spaceship" in
order to cross from one puddle of water to another, presents Blish at his
most accessible, dramatizing an adventure story with intellectual rigor
and mythopoeic power; "Common Time" and "Testament of Andros," which
explore issues of PERCEPTION and reality, are as intriguing as they were
when first published in 1953. Two late stories, "A Style in Treason" and
"How Beautiful With Banners," show the mature Blish at his elliptical,
dense, and saturnine best. (GF) See also CONCEPTUAL BREAKTHROUGH

The Seedling Stars
BLISH, JAMES(Gnome, 1957)Four magazine-derived stories, blended into an
account of "pantropy": the genetic alteration of humans in order to
colonize radically non-Earthlike planets. This method of planetary
settlement is presented as more viable than creating an artificial Earth
environment under domes or terraforming the planet to make it resemble
Earth. The opening section, in which Earth's military tries to destroy the
initial pantropic experiment as Frankensteinian, and the closing chapter,
in which, much later, the environmental devastation of Earth by its own
inhabitants has rendered the planet uninhabitable except by panatropically
Adapted Men, make it clear that Blish was writing not only about
biological adaptation in the far future but about racism and social
adaptation in the here and now. Blish's characteristic care and craft in
revising his own work can be traced from the pulp-era "Sunken Universe,"
first published in Super Science Stories in 1942, through the more mature
"Surface Tension" from Galaxy in 1952 (SFHF), to Book Three of this work;
an example of an author committing a kind of pantropy upon his own
literary offspring. See also GENETIC ENGINEERING

The Uplift War
BRIN, DAVID(Phantasia Press, 1987)Whoever owns the secret discovered by
the dolphins of Startide Risingcan gain control of the entire galactic
civilization. The planet Garth lies on the other side of the galaxy from
the site of that discovery, but the alien Gubru, in a bold move to force
humanity to give up the secret, have taken that planet and its population
of human beings and neo-chimps hostage. Only a small band of humans and
chimps stands between the Gubru and success. The setting here is less
exotic than those of the previous two books in the Uplift series, but
Brin's character development is particularly good and the neo-chimps
especially are a wonderful creation. Hugo winner, 1988. See also GALACTIC
EMPIRES

The Shockwave Rider
BRUNNER, JOHN(Harper, 1975)The third of Brunner's massive alarmist
fantasies, partly inspired by Alvin Toffler's Future Shock, warning
against the loss of individual freedom that might result from widespread
use of information technology and against the psychological effects of
rapid technological change. Brunner complained bitterly about Harper's
insensitive editing; the 1976 Ballantine reprint restored the author's
text. See also COMMUNICATIONS

The Vor Game
BUJOLD, LOIS MCMASTER(Baen, 1990)The culture of the planet Barrayar
values men only to the extent that they prove themselves in the military,
and Miles Vorkosigan, the disabled son of Lord Aral and Lady Cordelia
Vorkosigan, has determined to succeed in such a career despite his
disability. Miles proves his worth, first at an isolated weather station
and then in space, where he rescues his runaway cousin, the Emperor
Gregor, from possible death. This is superior SPACE OPERA with a touch of
humor. Earlier books in the series include The Warrior's Apprentice
(1986), Brothers in Arms (1989), and Borders of Infinity (1989), one
previously published section of which, "The Mountains of Mourning," won
both the Hugo and Nebula Awards for best novella in 1990. All the Miles
Vorkosigan books make for fine reading. Mirror Dance was published in
1994, and more volumes are promised. Compare C. S. Forester's Hornblower
novels. Hugo winner, 1991
================================================ Tarzan of the Apes
BURROUGHS, EDGAR RICE(McClurg, 1914)Published in All-Story (October 1912)
and serialized in the New York Evening World before book publication, the
novel emphasizes the boyhood and youth of Tarzan, Lord Greystoke,
Burroughs's most famous (and most macho) hero, the only one to attain
mythic proportions and become a part of worldwide popular culture.
Burroughs claimed that Tarzan combines the best of environments (unknown
Africa) and the best of heredities (British aristocracy). Because D'Arnot
is his teacher, taking him to Paris, one cannot fail to compare him to
Rousseau's Emile (1762), especially in terms of education, to contrast the
18th and 20th centuries, both emphasizing the "natural man." Tarzan saves
Jane Porter from an unwanted marriage, but does not wed her in this first
novel. Because attention to Jane and Jack (Korak the Killer), the son of
Tarzan, aged the apeman, his family was omitted from most of the later
novels, while Tarzan roamed the jungles and veldt, always beloved by a
conveniently available primitive beauty. One should compare the Africas
and the love stories of Burroughs and H. Rider Haggard to see the
contrasts. For other treatments of Tarzan, one should consult Philip Jose
Farmer's Lord Tyger (1970) and Tarzan Alive (1972), as well as Gene
Wolfe's "Tarzan of the Grapes" (1972). Among the innumerable films are Bo
Derek's feminist Tarzan- which attempts the story from Jane's point of
view-and the neo-behaviorist Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan (1984), with
its brilliant cinematography. See also APES AND CAVEMEN

Kindred
BUTLER, OCTAVIA(Doubleday, 1979)Dana, a well-educated contemporary
African-American woman, suddenly finds herself pulled into the past to
save the life of a distant ancestor, an early-19th-century southern white
boy named Rufus Weylin. Although she returns to the present moments later,
she soon finds herself saving Rufus again and again. Although only a short
time passes for her between each bout of TIME TRAVEL, years pass for
Rufus, who gradually grows into adulthood and becomes a slave owner. This
sometimes painful novel features superb character development. By forcing
Dana to confront her own white ancestry, Butler points out the necessity
of coming to terms with the past without oversimplifying it. Compare Lisa
Tuttle's Lost Futures (1992) and Jane Yolen's The Devil's Arithmetic
(1988).

Maps in a Mirror: The Short Fiction of Orson Scott Card
CARD, ORSON SCOTT (Tor, 1990)This enormous volume, some 46 stories,
represents most of Card's short fiction. Included are such well-known
pieces as the award-winning "Lost Boys" and "An Eye for an Eye,"
"Dogwalker," "Unaccompanied Sonata," "Ender's Game," " The
Originist,"and"Kingsmeat." Some of the early fiction and particularly the
non-science fiction is minor but, generally speaking, this is an excellent
collection from a controversial and important writer, who provides
commentary on the stories. See also CHILDREN IN SF

The Faded Sun: Kesrith
CHERRYH, C. J. (pseud. of Carolyn Janice Cherry)(DAW, 1978)The first
volume in a three-part novel, completed in The Faded Sun: Shon 'Jir (1979)
and The Faded Sun: Kutath (1980). An alien society organized somewhat in
the fashion of an anthill hires out its warriors as mercenaries. But when
its clients get into a WAR with humankind, the warriors and their kin are
virtually wiped out. The client species sues for peace, but the survivors
go their own way. One human involves himself with their cause and their
quest to save their race. Compare Jayge Carr's Leviathan's Deep.

The Fountains of Paradise
CLARKE, ARTHUR C(HARLES)(Gollancz, 1979)An engineer succeeds in building
a space elevator connecting a tropical island (modeled on Sri Lanka, where
Clarke lives, but moved for geographical convenience) to a space station
in geosynchronous orbit. Imposing propaganda for high TECHNOLOGY as the
means of human progress and salvation. Charles Sheffield's The Web Between
the Worlds (1979) develops the same premise in a more conventional
fashion. Hugo winner, 1980; Nebula winner, 1979
================================================ The Steel Crocodile
COMPTON, D(AVID) G(UY)(Ace, 1970) Brit. title:The Electric
Crocodile(Hodder & Stoughton, 1970)Two workers at a secret research
institute act as agents for a dissident group, but ultimately cannot
oppose the claustrophobic conservatism that has sterilized both scientific
and moral progress. Subtle and very convincing. Compare Kate Wilhehlm's
"April Fool's Day Forever" (1970). See also OPTIMISM AND PESSIMISM

Jurassic Park
CRICHTON, MICHAEL(Knopf, 1990)A wealthy industrialist bankrolls an
attempt to recreate dinosaurs using Cray computers, the latest in gene
sequencing technology, and DNA recovered from prehistoric insects trapped
in amber. Succeeding, he builds a glorified theme park to house them but,
just as the park is about to open, things begin to go wrong and the
dinosaurs break loose. Although somewhat predictable, the novel is
tremendous fun. It's also much more intelligent than viewers of the
Spielberg film might be led to believe. Compare Larry Niven's Dream Park
(1981). See also GENETIC ENGINEERING

The Man Who Melted
DANN, JACK(Bluejay, 1984)A man searches for his lost wife in a world
where social order has been torn apart by outbreaks of hysterical
collective consciousness, which have spawned a new religiosity and an
epidemic of schizophrenia. An ironic reconstruction of the voyage of the
Titanic is featured in the plot. Aggressively decadent, with a hint of
Jacobean tragedy. Compare Roger Zelazny's THE DREAM MASTER. See also PSI
POWERS

The Best of Avram Davidson
DAVIDSON, AVRAM(Doubleday, 1979) Ed. by Michael KurlandEleven stories and
a book chapter, from 1956 to 1971. Editor Kurland's short, sarcastic
introduction rerninds us that academicians seek to "classify" a
magnificently unorganized writer like Davidson at their peril. "Now Let Us
Sleep" and, less convincingly, "Help! I am Dr. Morris Goldpepper," are
conventional SF; as for the others, if they are as good as "King's Evil"
and "The Golem," does it really matter whether they are SF or fantasy?
Peter Beagle, a student of Davidson's during that writer's brief (and
quite ungovernable) sojourn as a college professor, testifies in a
foreword to Davidson's incredible, casual erudition; Davidson himself
wrote a modest afterword. Some readers may prefer the story selection in
Or All the Seas With Oysters (Berkley, 1962), whose Hugo-winning title
story this collection unaccountably omitted. See also GOLEM

Lest Darkness Fall
DE CAMP, L(YON) SPRAGUE(Holt, 1941)Originally a novel in (December 1939),
this was one of the earliest stories from the pulps to be taken up by a
mainstream hardcover publisher. (A specialty house, Prime Press, published
it again in 1949.) Aware of a problem with the"Connecticut Yankee" theme,
namely that not even a supergenius from the modern era could have
singlehandedly introduced the full panoply of modern industrial technology
into antiquity, de Camp gave his hero, stranded in A.D. 535 in the
post-Roman interregnum, the one indispensable survival skill: he can
understand spoken Vulgar Latin! Martin Padway then proceeds to introduce
what the primitive technology of the period could actually have absorbed.
In his headnote to the version, regrettably omitted from the book, de Camp
in scholarly fashion listed his sources: Cassiodorus (who figures as a
character in the story), Procopius of Caesarea, Gibbon, Bury; the author's
meticulous care in this regard breathes life into what is by all odds de
Camp's finest book. See also ALTERNATE WORLDS

Triton: An Ambiguous Heterotopia
DELANY, SAMUEL R(AY)(Bantam, 1976)This complex novel considers the
problems that might arise for an individual trying with difficulty to
orient himself in a culture where people have almost unlimited choice of
identity and social role. The uncertainty of the protagonist's life is
reflected in the unstable politics of the solar system, which ultimately
becomes embroiled in a brief but catastrophic war. A rich, dense
dramatization of issues in existential philosophy and sexual politics. See
also UTOPIAS

A Scanner Darkly
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)(Doubleday, 1977)The protagonist is, as usual in
Dick's novels, gradually enmeshed by a web of circumstance in which he
ceases to be able to distinguish between reality and hallucination. The
fascination with which the author had previously contemplated such
situations is here replaced by horrified revulsion. An affecting, powerful
novel. See also PERCEPTION

The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)(Underwood-Miller, 1987) 5 vols.With introductions
to its individual volumes by Roger Zelazny, Norman Spinrad, John Brunner,
James Tiptree, Jr., and Thomas M. Disch, the appearance of this work was a
major publishing event in SF. The 118 stories range from Dick's first
published one, from the lurid pages of Planet Stories in 1952, to a few
that appeared in this collection for the first time. Those in Vols. 1
through 4 were composed in SF's "early modern" period, ending in 1963;
those in Vol. 5 in the "modern" period that began in 1964, but Philip Dick
was so far ahead of most of his contemporaries in the 1950s that it is
hardly appropriate thus to periodize him; and Damon Knight's premature
judgment after the earliest of these stories had appeared [In Search of
Wonder], that Dick "writes the trivial, short, bland sort of story that is
instantly saleable and instantly forgettable" can now be set aside. The
existence of this collection corrects the critical record; much as had
happened earlier to Scott Fitzgerald, voluminous discussion of the novels
had obscured the author's gifts as a craftsman of shorter tales. Endnotes
to individual stories, written by Dick for earlier collections published
in 1977 and 1980, are informative and, one must say, wise. To single out
particular morsels from this rich banquet would be a disservice; however,
the author did state in 1976 that the story "Human Is" (written 1953; in
Vol. 2) "is my credo. May it be yours." A trade paper edition shifting two
stories between volumes and retitling was published by Citadel Twilight,
1990-1992. See also PERCEPTION

VALIS
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)(Bantam, 1981)A convoluted novel in which the
author figures as character, though his role is subservient to that of his
alter ego, Horselover Fat, who achieves miraculous enlightenment courtesy
of the godlike Vast Active Living Intelligence System, but has difficulty
communicating his insights to others. Radio Free Albemuth (1985) uses
similar materials, apparently being a different draft for the same
purpose. See also RELIGION

Galactic Pot-Healer
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)(Berkley, 1969)A very curious novel in which the
hero, a dissatisfied mender of pots, joins a group of misfits assembled by
a godlike alien to raise a sunken cathedral, while other ALIENS read the
runes that may indicate the destiny of the universe. A prefiguration of
the metaphysical themes of Dick's last novels, developed in a mock-naive
fashion slightly reminiscent of Kurt Vonnegut's THE SIRENS OF TITAN.A Maze
of Death (1970) picked up the theological issues for more earnest
development. Our Friends From Frolix 8 (1970) reassigned them to a
throwaway role as an alien god is discovered dead in the void and his
human messiah plays an essentially ambiguous role.

The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
DICK, PHILIP K. (Doubleday, 1965)In an early 21st century afflicted by
ecological catastrophes and forced emigration into space, Barney Mayerson
hopes to avoid being drafted to the Mars colony and keep his job as a
designer of dollhouses for Walt and Perky Pat, theminiature dolls whose
perfect lives offer vicarious escape for the miserable Martian colonists.
With Can-D, a hallucinogen manufactured by Barney's employer, the
colonists can enjoy brief hallucinations of suburban bliss as the poised
Walt and Perky Pat. However, Can-D is threatened by a new and more
powerful drug, Chew-Z, which is introduced onto the market by the
mysterious Palmer Eldritch after he returns from ten years in another star
system. While Can-D is short-lived in its effects and requires the use of
commercial accessories, Chew-Z seems indistinguishable from reality, and
appears to last forever. Only gradually do people realize the ontological
nightmare created by the sinister Palmer Eldritch, whose control of
reality makes him a kind of malign deity. Dick's explorations of altered
perceptions, his satire of American life in the early 60s, and his zany,
slapdash plot and settings are nowhere more vivid than in The Three
Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, which most Dick fans consider his finest
novel. Although it is not as well-written or carefully constructed as THE
MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE, its intensity and emotional power are matched only
by the much later A SCANNER DARKLY andVALIS. For different renditions of
the borderland between reality and illusion, compare Salman Rushdie's
Grimus and James Morrow's The Continent of Lies. (GF)See also DRUGS and
PERCEPTION

The Weathermonger
DICKINSON, PETER(Gollancz, 1968) The first volume in the Changes trilogy.
Geoffrey and Sally, brother and sister, having been abandoned to die as
witches, escape to France. There they are urged to return to England and
discover the cause of the changes that have thrown the British Isles back
into the Middle Ages, where ignorance and superstition again rule, all
things mechanical are feared, and even the weather is controlled by
incantation. The children find out that Merlin's sleep has been disturbed,
and, unhappy with what he sees, Merlin has sent England back to a time he
knows. Geoffrey and Sally convince him to wait for a more suitable time to
return and he relents, freeing England from its curse. A brilliantly
imaginative combination of myth and science fiction. Heartsease (1969)
recounts the successful rescue of a witch by a group of children. In The
Devil's Children (1970), Nicky and a band of Sikhs, free of the madness
caused by the changes, become allies, settle on a farm, and beat off
various threats to their safety. Compare William Mayne's Earthfasts or
John Christopher's The Prince in Waiting. See also HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

The Start of the End of It All
EMSHWILLER, CAROL(Women's Press, 1990)The most recent (and best) of the
author's story collections, following Joy in Our Cause (1974) and Verging
on the Pertinent (1989); gathers 18 stories from sixties, seventies, and
eighties. Some are straight mimetic fiction, but most construct absurdist
SF scenarios enabling brilliantly pointed observations of sexual politics,
such as the cat-hating aliens of the title story, whose attitudes converge
with those of human men toward women. The text of the 1990 U.K. and 1991
U.S. editions differs. Compare the stories of Joanna Russ. See also
FABULATION

To Your Scattered Bodies Go
FARMER, PHILIP JOSe(Putnam, 1971)The entire human race is reincarnated
along the banks of a huge river. Sir Richard Francis Burton sets off to
find out who accomplished this remarkable feat, and why (HW, 1972). In The
Fabulous Riverboat (1971), Sam Clemens undertakes a similar quest. Both
characters, and others who become involved in further books of the series,
The Dark Design (1977) and The Magic Labyrinth (1980), are continually
sidetracked by violent conflicts in which characters from various phases
of Earth's history are idiosyncratically matched against one another,
causing the main issue to be constantly confused, sometimes to the
detriment of the story. Associated stories outside the main sequence are
"Riverworld" in Riverworld and Other Stories (1979) and Gods of Riverworld
(1983). An early version of the story, written in the early 1950s for an
ill-fated competition, was rediscovered and issued as River of Eternity
(1983). Like a number of authors of successful, long-running series,
Farmer has recently franchised out the River World, editing a
shared-universe anthology, Tales of the Riverworld(1992), which features a
new novella by Farmer, "Crossing the Dark River," plus solid fiction by
Phillip C. Jennings, Harry Turtledove, Allen Steele, and others. Hugo
winner, 1972. See also ESCHATOLOGY

Sarah Canary
FOWLER, KAREN JOY(Holt, 1991)In 1873 an apparent madwoman stumbles into a
Chinese labor camp in Washington state and is led to a nearby insane
asylum. The woman, named Sarah Canary at the asylum, escapes and wanders
the Pacific coast, accompanied by a host of fascinating characters. But
who is Sarah, a broken victim of male oppression, the simple madwoman she
first appeared to be, or something more sinister, a vampire perhaps, or
something not of this planet? We never find out for sure, which has
frustrated critics bent on sticking the book into a generic pigeonhole.
What is certain, however, is that Sarah Canary is a brilliantly conceived,
beautifully written book. Compare Robert Charles Wilson's A Hidden Place
(1986). See also ALIENS

Rumors of Spring
GRANT, RICHARD(Bantam, 1987)A strange blend of satire, fable, science
fiction, and fantasy set on a far-future Earth where technology is in a
state of collapse, entropy seems to be gaining, and a badly damaged
ecology is actively fighting back. The First Biotic Crusade, a group of
eccentrics worthy of a Mervyn Peake novel, sets out in a huge Rube
Goldberg-like vehicle to uncover the truth behind the strange goings-on in
the world's last woodland, the Carbon Bank Forest. At once a cutting
attack on government bureaucracy, a sprightly and somewhat silly adventure
story, and an ecological fable, Rumors of Spring is beautifully written
and constantly surprising. Compare John Crowley's Little, Big (1981). See
also PASTORAL

The Hemingway Hoax
HALDEMAN, JOE(Morrow, 1990)John Baird, a Hemingway specialist at Boston
University with severe financial problems, falls in with some shady
characters who persuade him to fake and then claim to have rediscovered a
series of stories that Hemingway is known to have lost on a train trip.
Unbeknown to Baird or his confederates, however, some very strange
people-people not from our world-have a stake in Baird's not writing the
stories. Haldeman's intimate knowledge and love of Hemingway and his work
is highly apparent in this very short, very intense novel based on a Hugo
and Nebula Award-winning novella of the same name. Compare MacDonald
Harris's non-SF novel, Hemingway's Suitcase (1990). See also ALTERNATE
WORLDS

Make Room! Make Room!
HARRISON, HARRY(Doubleday, 1966)A classic novel of OVERPOPULATION and
pollution, reprinted in connection with the film version (which certainly
fails to do the book justice) as Soylent Green. An archetypal example of
1960s alarmism. (Compare John Brunner's STAND ON ZANZIBAR.)

A Storm of Wings
HARRISON, M(ICHAEL) JOHN(Sphere, 1980)A sequel to the downbeat sword and
sorcery novel The Pastel City (1971). It begins the transformation of the
city Viriconium into a milieu for more sophisticated literary exercise,
extended in In Viriconium (1982; U.S. title: The Floating Gods) and
Viriconium Nights (1984). Images of decadence and exhaustion abound in
this series, which contrasts with other images of FAR-FUTURE cities in
Edward Bryant's Cinnabar and Terry Carr's Cirque and has strong affinities
with certain aspects of Michael Moorcock's work. SF motifs are relatively
sparse in what is essentially a fantasy series, but the use of entropic
decay as a prevalent metaphor sustains the bridge between genres.

Starship Troopers
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Putnam, 1959)Heinlein's Annapolis and Regular
Navy background form the context for the training and baptism-of-fire of
future space cadets. A well-told story, this novel won the Hugo in 1959,
but, later got caught in the crossfire of powerful pro- and anti-Vietnam
War feeling, which divided the SF community as it did the "mainstream."
The paradox is that Heinlein, with this work, gave aid and comfort to the
war supporters, a group to which he belonged in the sixties; while with
another novel, Stranger in a Strange Land , he helped to energize the
radical student generation that opposed the war. Compare E. E. Smith's
LENSMAN series; contrast Edgar Pangborn, A MIRROR FOR OBSERVERS. Hugo
winner, 1959. See also WAR

The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Putnam, 1966)Colonists of the Moon declare
independence from Earth and contrive to win the ensuing battle with the
aid of a sentient computer. Action-adventure with some exploration of new
possibilities in social organization and fierce assertion of the motto
"There Ain't No Such Thing as a Free Lunch." Though not a true sequel, The
Cat Who Walks Through Walls (1985) is a much weaker novel set in the same
universe and with some of the same characters. Compare John Varley's Steel
Beach and Greg Bear's Moving Mars (1993). Hugo winner, 1967. See also
POLITICS

The Past Through Tomorrow
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON) (Putnam, 1967)Most of this omnibus compilation
had been previously published in four separate books: The Man Who Sold the
Moon (Shasta, 1950); The Green Hills of Earth (Shasta, 1951); Revolt in
2100 (Shasta, 1953); and Methuselah's Children (Gnome, 1958). These in
turn derived from magazine stories, starting in 1939 and continuing
through the 1940s; mainly in Astounding, a few in the Saturday Evening
Post. Collectively they constitute the bulk of Heinlein's future history:
a detailed forecast for the next two centuries, from the "Crazy Years"
(which, by Heinlein's calendar, have already happened!) to the beginning
of the first "mature" civilization 200 years hence. Other science fiction
writers (Poul Anderson, Isaac Asimov, James Blish, H. Beam Piper,
Cordwainer Smith) have undertaken future-building of this kind, but rarely
with Heinlein's degree of verisimilitude. The one major story omission
from the future history is "Universe" (in Orphans of the Sky), and of that
story only its brief prologue is really germane. But "Life-line,""Requiem,
""Blowups Happen,""Logic of Empire,""If This Goes On-,""Coventry,""The
Green Hills of Earth,""The Man Who Sold the Moon," they're all here. See
also PREDICTION

The Rolling Stones
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Scribner, 1952) Young adult The Stone family, at
the instigation of the twins, Castor and Pollux, reconditions a spaceship
as a family yacht, The Rolling Stone, and embarks on various adventures,
including selling used bikes on Mars and flat cats (which proliferate
hugely) in the asteroids. Its humor and wit still fresh, its portrait of
family life still winning although sexist, and its hard science plausible
and detailed, the novel aptly illustrates the author's eminence as writer
of science fiction for young readers. See also CHILDREN IN SF

White Queen
JONES, GWYNETH(Gollancz, 1991)This gender-bending story concerns a
reporter who, blackballed from his profession and living a hand-to-mouth
existence in a second-rate African city, is contacted by an apparently
female alien who offers him an interview and later seduces/rapes him.
Although the ALIENS look human, their thought patterns are radically
different from ours, and Jones does a particularly good job of portraying
them. Compare Gardner Dozois's STRANGERS.

The Stand
KING, STEPHEN(Doubleday, 1978) Recommended ed.: Doubleday, 1990This new
edition not only restores cut material, but updates the book as well,
setting it in the 1990s and improving the science content. The basic plot
remains unchanged: a killer flu escapes from a bio-weapons facility and 99
percent of the human race dies. In the United States, most of the good
people who are left gather in Boulder while most of the evil people end up
in Las Vegas. Armageddon follows. The novel's greatest strength lies in
King's ability to portray characters who are either highly believable or
chillingly twisted. Contrast David Brin's The Postman. See also HOLOCAUST
AND AFTER

The Best of Damon Knight
KNIGHT, DAMON (FRANCIS)(Nelson Doubleday, 1976)Twenty-two stories,
ranging from 1949 to 1972-"most of the best work I did during that time,"
Knight attests. They include "To Serve Man," which became a memorable
Twilight Zone episode; the sardonic "Not With a Bang"; "The Analogues,"
which became the first chapter of Hell's Pavement; "Babel II," in which a
visiting alien that looks like Happy Hooligan scrambles all human speech
and writing; "Special Delivery," in which a pregnant woman learns she is
carrying a fetal supergenius; several TIME TRAVEL stories "that God sent
me," Knight writes, "as a punishment for having said that the time-travel
story was dead"; "The Handler," about a socially rejected dwarf who inside
a "big man" humanoid shell is the life of the party; and, somewhat
atypically for Knight, "Mary," a powerful love story with a quite
unexpected happy ending. Barry Malzberg's introduction, "Dark of the
Knight," is short and laudatory; Knight's own headnotes are
disconcertingly frank about his personal life at the time the stories were
written, but that has always been his way.

The Best of C. M. Kornbluth
KORNBLUTH, C(YRIL) M. (Nelson Doubleday, 1976) Ed. by Frederik
PohlNineteen stories, from 1941 to 1958, attest to the high quality of
what Kornbluth wrote in his tragically short career: "The Adventurer,"
with its devastating punchline, as well as "The Little Black Bag" , "The
Luckiest Man in Denv,""Gomez" (perhaps the first SF story set in a New
York City Hispanic milieu), "The Marching Morons" (SFHF), "With These
Hands," and one he had barely completed at the time of his death, "Two
Dooms." Most have been repeatedly anthologized. Pohl, Kornbluth's frequent
collaborator, selected the stories and wrote the introduction. Only a
rubric against annotating pure fantasy stories prevented listing also
Thirteen O'Clock (Dell, 1970), which reproduced the sprightly tales
Kornbluth (under the name "Cecil Corwin") wrote in the early forties as a
teenager; no one should be denied the pleasure of reading them.

The Best of Henry Kuttner
KUTTNER, HENRY(Nelson Doubleday, 1975)Seventeen stories, mostly from
1940s Astounding. Science fiction with an acute psychological sensibility,
straightforwardly told. Ray Bradbury contributes an appreciative
introduction. Here are stories originally penned under Kuttner's mordant
Lewis Padgett pseudonym, such as "The Twonky,""The Proud Robot," and the
haunting "Mimsy Were the Borogoves" (SFHF)-the most plausible explanation
yet of where Lewis Carroll really got that nonsense poem. Other stories
had first been published under Kuttner's own name, including the powerful
"Absalom." There are no stories under the "Lawrence O'Donnell" nom de
plume (that is, co-written with C. L. Moore), although that is always a
hard judgment call with that highly symbiotic husband-wife writing team.

Mutant
KUTTNER, HENRY, and C(ATHERINE) L. MOORE (published under the name Lewis
Padgett)(Gnome, 1953)These are the "Baldy" stories, published in
Astounding between 1945 and 1953; the first, which assumed a
post-atomic-war "balance of terror" among independent city-states linked
by commerce, interestingly appeared in the magazine just before the actual
atomic bomb. Radiation-induced mutation has begotten a race of telepaths,
with a secondary genetic trait of baldness, hence the name. To wear a wig
or go proudly naked-headed signifies an ideological division, between
living as harmoniously as may be with the nontelepath majority and
aggressively asserting superiority on Nazi "superman" lines. The rational
working out of this dilemma created a warm, socially and politically
thoughtful story. Compare Alfred Bester, THE DEMOLISHED MAN; contrast
Zenna Henderson, PILGRIMAGE. See also PSI POWERS

The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia
LE GUIN, URSULA K(ROEBER)(Harper, 1974)This story contrasts the
poverty-stricken world of Anarres, whose political order is anarchist and
egalitarian, with its rich neighbor Urras, from whose capitalist and
competitive system the settlers of Anarres initially fled. A physicist who
must travel from one world to the other serves as a self-conscious and
anxious viewpoint character. A dense and very careful work, arguably the
best example of how SF can be used for serious discussion of moral and
political issues. The quality of the writing is also outstanding. Compare
Doris Lessing's Canopus in Archives series and Hermann Hesse's Magister
Ludi (1943). Hugo winner, 1973; Nebula winner, 1974. See also UTOPIAS

The Wind's Twelve Quarters
LE GUIN, URSULA K(ROEBER)(Harper, 1975)The first of Le Guin's short
fiction collections. The stories are various in theme but uniformly well
written, ranging from the philosophical "Vaster Than Empires and More
Slow" and the moving story of clone siblings, "Nine Lives," to a brief
prelude to The Dispossessed, "The Day Before the Revolution" (Nebula
winner, 1974), and the dark fable, "The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas"
(Hugo winner, 1974). Within the SF field their elegance is matched by some
of the work of Thomas Disch, but their earnest seriousness is without
parallel. Le Guin's more recent collection, Buffalo Gals and Other Animal
Presences (1987), includes a number of stories available in her earlier
collections but is notable for her Hugo award-winning fantasy tale,
"Buffalo Girls, Won't You Come Out Tonight?" See also CLONES

The Word for World Is Forest
LE GUIN, URSULA K(ROEBER)(Berkley, 1976)Short novel originally published
in Again, Dangerous Visions . Human colonists on an alien world cause
untold damage to the innocent natives and their environment. A harsh
comment on the ethics and politics of colonialism, making good use of
anthropological perspectives. Compare Michael Bishop's Transfigurations.
Hugo winner, 1973. See also COLONIZATION OF OTHER WORLDS

The Norton Book of Science Fiction
LE GUIN, URSULA K., and Brian Attebery, eds(Norton, 1993)Unlike the usual
Norton anthology, this enormous, 67-story, 864-page volume makes no
pretense of establishing a canon of standard classics. The selection,
although excellent, is somewhat idiosyncratic, excluding such expected
names as Bradbury, Asimov, Heinlein, and Clarke (only North American
authors are included), with coverage limited to the 1960-1990 period. Many
of the genre's acknowledged masters are here, however, among them
Sturgeon, Blish, Dick, Benford, Butler, Gibson, and Le Guin herself, but
also included are stories by less well known writers such as Eleanor
Arnason, Molly Gloss, Andrew Weiner, and Diane Glancy. The book places an
unusually strong emphasis on women, minority and, oddly, Canadian writers.
The 129-page paperback teacher's guide, by Attebery alone, provides
one-page commentaries on each story and short chapters on teaching SF, SF
history and marketing, critical approaches to SF, primary and secondary
bibliographies, and a list of resources. Compare David Hartwell's The
World Treasury of Science Fiction (52 stories, 1,083 pages); contrast the
1946 golden age Raymond J. Healy/J. Francis McComas classic, Adventures in
Time and Space (33 stories, 997 pages). See also GOLDEN AGE OF SF

The Best of Fritz Leiber
LEIBER, FRITZ (REUTER)(Nelson Doubleday, 1974)Twenty-two stories from the
mid-1940s through the 1960s. Poul Anderson contributes an appreciative
introduction; Leiber wraps it up in an afterword. Stories range from
fiendish Astounding puzzlers ("Sanity," "The Enchanted Forest") through
early-fifties dystopias ("Coming Attraction," "Poor Superman") to
atmospheric tales from the late fifties such as that ultimate tribute to
Marilyn Monroe, "A Deskful of Girls," and the quietly creepy "Little Old
Miss Macbeth." Only one story is in Leiber's supernatural horror vein, and
there are none of his sword-and-sorcery tales. Readers may argue
endlessly, however, as to whether "The Man Who Never Grew Young"-the only
story retained from Leiber's first, long-out-of-print collection Night's
Black Agents (Arkham, 1947)-is SF or fantasy.

The Wanderer
LEIBER, FRITZ(Ballantine, 1964)Worldwide disaster occurs when a
mysterious, planet-sized spaceship appears out of nowhere, goes into Earth
orbit, and begins to take the Moon apart, apparently for fuel. Leiber's
characters and dialogue haven't held up all that well over the years, but
his description of a large-scale catastrophe still impresses. Compare
Philip Wylie and Edwin Balmer's When Worlds Collide and Greg Bear's The
Forge of God. Hugo winner, 1965. See also INVASION

Solaris
LEM, STANISLAW(Walker, 1970) Trans. (from a French translation) by Joanna
Kilmartin and Steve CoxWritten in Polish in 1961, this novel combines
profound philosophic speculation with the structure of traditional
action-adventure SF, embodied in a clear, vivid writing style that somehow
survives two translations. A planet under study by Earth scientists for
many decades is swathed in a world-girdling ocean, which, the scientists
have realized after initial skepticism, is one immense sentient organism.
For purposes of its own (never disclosed), this ocean "reads" the deepest
memories of the four men housed at Station Solaris and sends each a
double-"Phantom"-of a woman in his past; in the case of the viewpoint
character his estranged and since deceased wife, Rheya. But the phantom
Rheya thinks she is the real Rheya. And the mysterious world-ocean,
constantly flinging up strange shapes that defy the savants' efforts at
classification, may be the first, infantile phase of an emerging
"imperfect God." A major work by any measure. In the Soviet Union Solaris
was made into a well-received film. Compare Robert Silverberg, The Face of
the Waters (1991). See also LIVING WORLDS

Galaxies
MALZBERG, BARRY N(ORMAN)(Pyramid, 1975)Expanded from the novelette "A
Galaxy Called Rome." The plot, deliberately designed as a hard SF story,
involves a spaceship endangered by a black hole, on whose fate much
depends; this is blended with an elaborate commentary on the psychology
and sociology of SF writing, using the story as paradigm. It thus becomes
a brilliantly self-conscious work of art, more telling in many ways than
Malzberg's Herovit's World (1973). See also RECURSIVE SF

Memoirs of a Spacewoman
MITCHISON, NAOMI(Gollancz, 1962) U.S. paperback edition, Berkley, 1973The
viewpoint character's scientific specialty is COMMUNICATION with aliens.
Women, in this intergalactic future, are by and large better at that kind
of work than men; likelier to perceive the reality of sentience in bizarre
lifeforms, and more adroit at devising ways of making contact.
Extraterrestrials in this novel include a starfish-like, radially
symmetrical species whose mathematics and philosophy differ profoundly
from Earth's simple, on-off; yes-no bilateralism, and a
caterpillars-and-butterflies race whose adult form abuses and lays guilt
trips upon the sentient larval stage from which it metamorphosed. This
story also explores, more boldly even than Philip Farmer, the
possibilities of interspecies sex (and parenting). Considered a pioneering
proto-feminist work; certainly the female protagonist's outlook differs
markedly from that of the extroverted aggressive male heroes of most space
opera.

The Cornelius Chronicles
MOORCOCK, MICHAEL(Avon, 1977)Omnibus containing The Final
Programme(1969), A Cure for Cancer (1971), The English Assassin (1972),
and The Condition of Muzak (1977), the first three in slightly revised
form. Jerry Cornelius, the contemporary and near-future avatar of the
multifaceted Moorcockian hero, features in the tetralogy in various roles:
secret agent, messiah, corpse, dreary teenager and even a negative image
of himself. The first novel begins as a parody of heroic fiction, its
events running parallel to two of Moorcock's early Elric stories, but
moves on to parody other themes in popular fiction. The middle volumes
present a kaleidoscopic display of 20th-century motifs, and the fourth
moves on again to subvert the fantasy elements in the first three and add
its own theme of tragedy, symbolized with the aid of images drawn from
harlequinade. The series is a sprawling masterpiece: a dream story loaded
with all the threads of contemporary consciousness and modern mythology,
bearing an appropriate burden of nightmare and irony. The ubiquitous Jerry
can also be found in associated materials. See also NEW WAVE

The Best of C. L. Moore
MOORE, C(ATHERINE) L. (Nelson Doubleday, 1975)Ten stories from 1933 to
1946. Lester del Rey, a longtime admirer, selected them and wrote a
biographical introduction; Moore added a personal afterword. Outstanding
are three stories from Astounding: "The Bright Illusion" (1934), a
human-alien love story that anticipates issues raised by Ursula Le Guin's
THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS; "No Woman Born" (1944), about the triumphant
return to the stage of a singer-dancer all but destroyed in a fire, whose
brain has been transplanted into a robot body; and "Vintage Season" (1946;
SFHF)-originally bylined as Lawrence O'Donnell, the pseudonym employed for
collaborations between Moore and her spouse Henry Kuttner, here claimed as
Moore's alone-about time traveling tourists and the present-day man who
rents his house to them with tragic results. From Weird Tales the
collection includes Moore's first story, "Shambleau" (1933), which
introduced her popular interplanetary roamer, Northwest Smith, and two
tales of her medieval female knight Jirel of Joiry. A highly satisfying
collection. See also WOMEN SF WRITERS

This Is the Way the World Ends
MORROW, JAMES(Holt, 1986)Satirical apocalyptic fantasy in which the few
survivors of the holocaust are put on trial by those who would have lived
if only their ancestors had ordered their affairs more reasonably. Clever
and elegant. Compare Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle . See also HOLOCAUST AND
AFTER

The Mote in God's Eye
NIVEN, LARRY, and JERRY POURNELLE(Simon & Schuster, 1974)Superior space
opera in which Earth's interstellar navy contacts and does battle with an
enormously hostile alien race. The scenes of space warfare are well
handled, and the alien Moties are fascinating. The sequel, The Gripping
Hand (1993), is more mundane. Compare C. J. Cherryh's DOWNBELOW STATION or
Vernor Vinge's A FIRE UPON THE DEEP. See also ALIENS

A Mirror for Observers
PANGBORN, EDGAR(Doubleday, 1954)Martians in underground cities for
thousands of years have manipulated Earth's historical development.
Martian Elmis foresees a great new ethical age for Earth under the
leadership of a Gandhi/M. L. King saint-figure; Martian Namir looks toward
a "final solution" for the Earth problem in mutually annihilative war. The
conflict between Elmis and Namir has been compared with that of God and
Satan in the Book of Job; and beyond that, wrote Peter S. Beagle in
afterword to a later edition of the novel (Bluejay, 1983, p. 228), it
reflects "the endless internal battle that everyone fights who cannot
quite abandon hope of one day waking from the nightmare of our species'
history." Contrast Kurt Vonnegut, THE SIRENS OF TITAN . See also OPTIMISM
AND PESSIMISM

Woman on the Edge of Time
PIERCY, MARGE(Knopf; 1976)A Hispanic-American mother undergoes
experimental psychosurgery. She makes psychic contact with the
22nd-century world that has resulted from a FEMINIST revolution whose
success may depend on the subversion of the experiments in which she is
involved. Outstanding for the elaborate description of the future utopia
and the graphic representation of the inhumanity inherent in the way that
contemporary people can and do treat one another. Compare Joanna Russ's
THE FEMALE MAN.

The Anubis Gates
POWERS, TIM(Ace, 1983)An academic interested in a minor Victorian poet
named William Ashbless is recruited as a kind of tour guide to a time
traveling expedition whose members expect to hear Coleridge lecture. When
he is marooned in 1810 he has to fight a multitude of enemies, including
the man who marooned him. His struggle for survival, which necessitates
his becoming Ashbless, makes a fabulous adventure story with some
excellent gothic elements. More fantasy than SF, but the ingeniously
constructed paradox-avoiding time-tripping draws heavily on the SF
tradition. Compare James P. Blaylock's HOMUNCULUS. See also STEAMPUNK

Strata
PRATCHETT, TERRY(Colin Smythe, 1981)The heroine, a "worldbuilder,"
deserts her work in order to investigate the mysterious works of others
(presumably aliens) in the same vein-in particular, a flat Earth enclosed
within a crystal sphere, complete with monsters and demons. She sets out
with two alien companions to explore it, attempting to find out who built
it and why. An absurdist RINGWORLD, subverting SF cliches. See also HUMOUR

An Infinite Summer
PRIEST, CHRISTOPHER(Faber, 1979)Priest's second collection, superior to
Real-Time World (1974). The mundane lives of the characters are usually
interrupted by fantastic distortions of time and space, whose consequences
are seductive but possibly subversive of sanity. Includes "Palely
Loitering" and "The Watched." See also TIME TRAVEL

The Glamour
PRIEST, CHRISTOPHER(Cape, 1984)Outcasts of society, who pass unnoticed in
"the hierarchy of visual interest," can make themselves invisible, a
talent that is, ironically, the "glamour" of the title. The amnesiac hero
gradually relearns the use of this talent and rediscovers his love for the
heroine. A delicately ambivalent tale of welcome alienation. The U.S.
edition (Doubleday, 1985) is substantially revised. Compare Fritz Leiber's
The Sinful Ones(1953; revised 1980). See also PERCEPTION

Gravity's Rainbow
PYNCHON, THOMAS(Viking, 1973)A sprawling novel about a World War II
psychological warfare unit full of weird characters, one of whom seems to
be determining the pattern of V-2 rocket attacks by his sexual activities
but refuses to submit to study and possible control. Extraordinarily
elaborate black comedy. Compare the research establishment in Carter
Scholz and Glen A. Harcourt's Palimpsests (1985). See also ENTROPY

Red Mars
ROBINSON, KIM STANLEY(HarperCollins, 1992)This novel, the first of a
projected trilogy, is, without a doubt, the most detailed and impressive
portrayal of the exploration and colonization of another planet ever
published. Robinson is in complete control of his materials, whether he is
describing the engineering difficulties involved in the building of a
large-scale underground habitat or the political wheeling and dealing
involved in placating a wide range of political, religious, ethnic, and
commercial interests, all of which want a slice of the Martian pie. The
novel features a large cast of well-developed characters, breathtaking
descriptions of the Martian landscape, and a sophisticated understanding
of the complex interplay between technology and politics. Red Mars may
well be the finest hard-science fiction novel of the last decade. Sequels
are Green Mars (1994) and Blue Mars. For a competent, smaller-scale
approach to the exploration of the Red Planet, compare Ben Bova's Mars.
See also MARS

The Planet on the Table
ROBINSON, KIM STANLEY(Tor, 1986)Collection of early fiction by one of the
genre's finest literary writers, including Robinson's World Fantasy
Award-winning story about the Spanish Armada, "Black Air," and the fine
alternate history tale, "The Lucky Strike," which is set in a world where
the bomb was not dropped on Hiroshima. Robinson's other major collections
are Escape From Kathmandu (1989), which includes the Hugo- and Nebula
Award-nominated title novella, and Remaking History (1991), which includes
the Nebula-nominated "Before I Wake," as well as "Vinland the Dream,"
"Glacier," and 12 other fine stories. Compare John Kessel's Meeting in
Infinity. See also ALTERNATE WORLDS

Stardance
ROBINSON, SPIDER, and JEANNE ROBINSON(Dial, 1979)Based on a novella (Hugo
winner, 1978; Nebula winner, 1977). A story of exotic redemption in which
a crippled dancer becomes involved in humanity's first contact with
ALIENS, and helps set the stage for a mystical communion between the
species. The sequel, Starseed (1991), is much less successful. Compare
Orson Scott Card's Songmaster (1980).

The Child Garden: A Low Comedy
RYMAN, GEOFF(Unwin, 1989)This brilliant postmodernist extravaganza takes
place in a tropical future London where genetic engineering has abolished
cancer, mastered the art of passing on knowledge through viruses, allowed
human beings to photosynthesize and, tragically, caused an irreversible
change in human genetics, which leads most human beings to die in their
mid-thirties. The complex plot centers on a pair of artist-lovers-Milena,
a mediocre actress with a talent for directing, and Rolfa, a huge,
genetically engineered Polar Woman who sings opera. For comparably
audacious speculation about bioengineering, see Greg Bear's BLOOD MUSIC .
For a comparable picture of a city transformed by the greenhouse effect,
see Elizabeth Hand's WINTERLONG . Winner of the 1990 Arthur C. Clarke
Award and the JWC Award and a nominee for the British SF Association
Award. See also DYSTOPIAS

Women of Wonder: Science Fiction Stories by Women About Women
SARGENT, PAMELA, ed.(Vintage, 1974)Twelve reprinted short stories by
women writers, all devoted to the examination of sex roles. Included are a
number of classics, among them Judith Merril's "That Only a Mother," Anne
McCaffrey's "The Ship Who Sang," Sonya Dorman's "When I Was Miss Dow,"
Kate Wilhelm's "Baby, You Were Great," Carol Emshwiller's "Sex and/or Mr.
Morrison," Ursula K. Le Guin's "Vaster Than Empires and More Slow," and
Vonda N. Mclntyre's "Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand." Sargent's long
introductory essay is particularly valuable. A second reprint volume, More
Women of Wonder (1976), featured another introduction by Sargent and seven
novelettes, including C. L. Moore's "Jirel Meets Magic," Joanna Russ's
"The Second Inquisition," and Le Guin's "The Day Before the Revolution." A
collection of original fiction, The New Women of Wonder (1978), included
Dorman's "Building Block," Eleanor Arnason's "Warlord of Saturn's Moons,"
and others. Two new Women of Wonder anthologies were nearing completion in
late 1993 and will be published in 1995. Compare Cassandra Rising (1978)
edited by Alice Laurance, Millennial Women (1978), edited by Virginia
Kidd, and Aurora: Beyond Equality (1976), edited by Vonda N. Mclntyre and
Susan J. Anderson. See also FEMINISM

The Ragged Astronauts
SHAW, BOB(Gollancz, 1986)In a planetary system where two worlds share a
common atmosphere the inhabitants of one are forced by circumstance to
migrate to the other in hot air BALLOONS. An unusual adventure story in
which good characterization helps to make extraordinary events plausible.
The somewhat less successful sequels are The Wooden Spaceships (1988) and
The Fugitive Worlds (1989).

The Illuminatus! Trilogy
SHEA, ROBERT, and ROBERT ANTON WILSON(Dell, 1984)An omnibus edition of a
three-decker novel whose separate parts-The Eye in the Pyramid, The Golden
Apple, and Leviathan-first appeared in 1975. A wild extravaganza that
hypothesizes that all the secret societies claiming access to a special
enlightenment were and are part of a huge conspiracy that will take over
Earth unless the heroes of the counterculture can stop them. A crazy
compendium of contemporary concerns. Compare Thomas Pynchon's GRAVITY'S
RAINBOW . See also PARANOIA

Is That What People Do?
SHECKLEY, ROBERT(Holt, 1984)This collection recombines stories from
earlier collections, as did The Wonderful World of Robert Sheckley (1979).
A five-volume set collected 132 stories, The Collected Short Stories of
Robert Sheckley (Pulphouse, 1991). His stories are very funny, but the
HUMOR is generally underlaid with a dark and serious suspicion of the
follies of human vanity. His robot stories are exceptionally fine and
should be compared and contrasted with the Isaac Asimov stories, whose
themes they often subvert and mock. Compare also the short fiction of John
Sladek.

A Time of Changes
SILVERBERG, ROBERT(Doubleday, 1971)A colony world preserves a strange
culture based on self-hatred, but the protagonist learns individualism
from a visiting Earthman and becomes a revolutionary advocate of a new
kind of community. Unlike Ayn Rand's Anthem , with which it inevitably
invites comparison, it is not a political allegory but an exploration of
the value of human relationships. Nebula winner, 1971. See also PSYCHOLOGY

Science Fiction Hall of Fame
Vol. I (Doubleday, 1971); Vols. IIA and IIB (Doubleday, 1974)Volume 1
edited by ROBERT SILVERBERG consisted of 26 short stories and novelettes
chosen by ballot of the Science Fiction Writers of America as the best
shorter works in the field to have been published before 1965. The oldest
story in the collection is Stanley Weinbaum's "A Martian Odyssey" (1934);
the newest is Roger Zelazny's "A Rose for Ecclesiastes" (1963). An
editorial decision to limit the collection to one story from each author
may have slightly skewed the selection. Is "The Roads Must Roll" the story
by which we wish to remember Robert Heinlein? On the whole, however, this
anthology may be taken as definitive, and it works effectively in the
classroom, except among the worldly-wise who "have read all those stories
before." For Volume 2, Ben Bova edited 22 novellas chosen the same way, 11
in each sub-volume. They range from H. G. Wells's indispensable The Time
Machine (1895), through Golden Age classics like Heinlein's "Universe" and
John W. Campbell's "Who Goes There?" to strong works from the early 1960s
such as Jack Vance's "The Moon Moth." In both Bova's and Silverberg's
anthologies there is surprisingly little overlap with the Hugo winners; in
fact, but one short story, "Flowers for Algernon," and one novella "The
Big Front Yard," which may say something about the differences between
fans' and writers' literary tastes. See also GOLDEN AGE OF SF

Way Station
SIMAK, CLIFFORD D(ONALD)(Doubleday, 1963)A Civil War veteran comes home
to the family farm, which becomes a station or stop for interstellar
travelers. Time passes more slowly inside the disguised farmhouse, so that
the stationmaster's longevity in the outside world (which he enters to
pick up his mail!) attracts the attention of hostile neighbors and of an
implausibly understanding CIA agent. The story gets its effect from casual
juxtaposition of bizarre alien visitors and artifacts with realistic
southwestern Wisconsin locale. lt carries Simak's perennial message that
all sentient beings can and must get along, or perish; the various
galactic races face the same danger from themselves as do Earth's own
warring peoples. A tragic counterpoint is a bittersweet, thwarted love
between the hero and a composite "ghost" of two women from his wartime
past. A sentimental story, but effective; it won the Hugo Award in 1963
for best novel. Hugo winner, 1963. See also PASTORAL

Hyperion
SIMMONS, DAN(Doubleday, 1989)Hyperion is the first half of one of the
most complex space operas ever written. With a structure based on the
Canterbury Tales, it tells the story of a pilgrimage of sorts to the
planet Hyperion, where the Time Tombs, alien artifacts that run backward
through time, are about to open. As in Chaucer, each pilgrim has his or
her own story to tell; stories that are individually riveting and
contribute thematically to the novel as a whole. The book ends just as the
travelers reach their destination. The Fall of Hyperion (1990) takes its
inspiration from Keats's poem of the same name. It continues the narration
of events at the tombs, but also opens up into a portrait of a
sophisticated interstellar culture where teleportation is so basic that
people routinely build homes with rooms on more than one planet. Powerful
players are interested in the events on Hyperion, and the individual
crises faced by the pilgrims may have galaxy-spanning outcomes. The
Hyperion books suffer from occasional problems of continuity, but they are
beautifully written and have few equals for sheer, large-scale sense of
wonder. A third volume is promised. On a somewhat smaller scale, compare
Alexander Jablokov's Carve the Sky . Hugo winner, 1990. See also
METAPHYSICS

The Rediscovery of Man: The Complete Short Science Fiction of Cordwai
SMITH, CORDWAINER (pseud. of Paul Myron Anthony Linebarger)(NESFA Press,
1993) Ed. by J. J. Pierce Gathers 33 stories, including two previously
unpublished, thus replacing The Best of Cordwainer Smith (1975; U.K.
title: The Rediscovery of Man) and The Instrumentality of Mankind (1979).
Most tales belong to an elliptical, vaguely allegorical future history,
relating colonization of space and achievement of virtual immortality,
both purchased at the price of growing class division between
Instrumentality and Underpeople, genetically engineered slaves. Most tales
can stand alone, and many are classics: "Scanners Live in Vain," "The Dead
Lady of Clown Town," "The Ballad of Lost C'Mell," and others. Norstrilia
(1975), a novel relating the accession of Underpeople to full civil
rights, continues the overarching story. The future history is evocative,
baroquely brilliant (though at times politically dubious), moving between
the early scientific romances of H. G. Wells and sixties New Wave. See
also FAR FUTURE

The Lensman Series
SMITH, E(DWARD) E(LMER)(Fantasy Press, 1948-1954)The SPACE OPERA to end
all space operas, with humans and aliens arrayed (some on each side) in a
cosmic war of Good and Evil, which even George Lucas would be hard put to
top. For all its implausibilities, this series represents a vast
improvement in "Doc" Smith's novelistic skills of storytelling and
character portrayal over his archetypal, but crude, Skylark of Space .
Readers' response to the "Civilization" vs. "Boskonia" theme as an
allegory of the "West" vs. "Fascism" during World War II was an important
factor in the stories' initial reception. The novels are best read in the
order in which they appeared in Astounding: Galactic Patrol (1937-1938),
Gray Lensman (1939-1940), Second-Stage Lensmen (1942), and Children of the
Lens (1947-1948). Triplanetary is a fix-up novel, which converts an
earlier, previously unrelated serial in Amazing into a "prequel" to the
series; it and First Lensman, written after the initial tetralogy but
preceding its chronology, give away Smith's conceptual scheme, which his
Lensman-hero had to puzzle out the hard way through four long novels.
Vortex Blaster (1960) is peripheral to the main series, although occurring
in the same future universe; it grew out of short stories in the more
obscure pulps (Comet, Super Science) in 1941.

Star Maker
STAPLEDON, (WILLIAM) OLAF(Methuen, 1937)A companion piece to LAST AND
FIRST MEN , taking the essay in myth creation still further to present an
entire history of the cosmos and an account of its myriad life forms. The
narrator's vision expands through a series of phases, each giving him a
wider perspective until he finally glimpses the Star Maker at his work,
experimenting in the cause of producing new and better creations. A
magnificent work by any standards; the most important speculative work of
the period. Of related interest is Nebula Maker, a preliminary and less
mature version of Star Maker, written in the mid-1930s but not published
until 1976. See also LIVING WORLDS

Snow Crash
Stephenson, Neal(Bantam, 1992)An outrageous combination of CYBERPUNK
tropes, sophisticated linguistics theory, and postmodernist satire, Snow
Crash is set in a near-future America where government has broken down and
just about everything is done by franchise. The main character, Hiro
Protagonist, a.k.a. the Deliverator, is a genius hacker and samurai
warrior, but he makes his living delivering pizza for the Mafia. When a
deadly disease, the snow crash virus, begins to take out hackers and
threatens virtual reality itself, Hiro is the man to tame it. The novel is
a complex stew of cyberspace high jinks, religion, off-the-wall humor, and
action-adventure sequences. It's crammed with delightful throwaway ideas,
such as Mafia-enforced, potentially deadly, 30-minute pizza delivery
deadlines and semi-intelligent, nuclear-powered watchdogs. Although not
calculated to bring pleasure to fans of old-fashioned, meat and potatoes
hard SF, Snow Crash is a genuinely dazzling novel. Compare William
Gibson's NEUROMANCER and Pat Cadigan's SYNNERS .

The Diamond Age
Stephenson, Neal(Bantam, 1995)The age of Stephenson's title is the era of
NANOTECHNOLOGY, when molecular control of manufacturing processes permit
light and superstrong materials fabricated from (usually) crystalline
carbon. In the 22d century, fully developed nanotechnology has produced a
world with little material want, but numerous bizarre systems of social
control, including a revival of tribalism, innumerable tiny nation-states,
and a transnational society called the neo-Victorians, who look for social
stability in the hierarchies and intricate structures of 19th-century
England. John Percival Hackworth, a rising neo-Victorian who works for the
posh design company Bespoke, illicitly copies an advanced interactive
device called A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer, only to lose it in a
mugging. When one of the muggers presents the device to his sister, Nell,
its enormous transformative potential is loosed upon the hypercomplex but
unsuspecting molecularly-engineered civilization. Stephenson combines
nanotechnology with STEAMPUNK in a flamboyantly inventive work of
sustained virtuosity, an infusion of nanotech speculation (about which
Stephenson has done more of his homework than most SF writers) into the
model of William Gibson and Bruce Sterling's THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE. A
pastiche more than a work of imaginative originality, The Diamond Age is
an enormously entertaining, wide-screen science fiction entertainment.
(GF)

Schismatrix
STERLING, BRUCE(Arbor House, 1985)The hero, in the course of a long and
eventful life, witnesses the political and technological evolution of the
solar system after Earth has been devastated. The long struggle between
the biotechnologically inclined Shapers and the electronically expert
Mechanists is complicated by the arrival of aliens and the eruption of new
ideological movements. A marvelous compendium of ideas; an imaginative
tour de force. Compare Jack Williamson's Lifeburst . See also GENETIC
ENGINEERING

Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology
STERLING, BRUCE, ed.(Arbor, 1986)Reprint anthology of the latest New Wave
movement in American SF, edited by one of the major proponents and
theorists for " CYBERPUNK," which features a streetwise and cynical
assessment of future possibilities generated by new information and
biotechnology. Other leading figures in the movement-William Gibson, Pat
Cadigan, and John Shirley prominent among them-are of course represented.

The Ugly Swans
STRUGATSKII, ARKADII NATANOVICH, and BORIS NATANOVICH
STRUGATSKII(Macmillan, 1979) Trans. of Gadkie lebedi , 1972, by Alexander
Nakhimovsky and Alice Stone NakhimovskyIn a decadent future stange weather
conditions bring fantastic changes to a region where children appear to be
evolving into superhumanity. Contrast Arthur C. Clarke's CHILDHOOD'S END .
See also CHILDREN IN SF

More Than Human
STURGEON, THEODORE(Farrar, 1953)Winner of the International Fantasy Award
in 1954, and deservedly so. Growing out of the acclaimed novella, "Baby ls
Three," this excellent work describes the rise, against all the meanness
and bigotries of the surrounding world, of Homo Gestalt, an individual
composed of the blended intelligences of numerous people, each of whom
retains personal identity while contributing a particular special strength
or talent to the whole. An emergence-of-the-superhuman story; made more of
a struggle than it was for the superchildren in Arthur C. Clarke's
CHILDHOOD'S END, but shorn also of the inevitable tragedy forecast for the
superhumans in Olaf Stapledon's Odd John . Arguably Sturgeon's best book,
and frequently on lists for school courses in SF. See also PSI POWERS

Gravity's Angels
SWANWICK, MICHAEL(Arkham, 1991)This collection of Swanwick's major short
fiction includes such fine stories as "The Feast of St. Janis," "The
Transmigration of Philip K," "Mummer's Kiss," "The Edge of the World," and
"Trojan Horse." A number of these stories are award nominees and all are
beautifully written. One of the best collections in recent memory. Compare
Bruce Sterling's CRYSTAL EXPRESS and William Gibson's BURNING CHROME .

Stations of the Tide
SWANWICK, MICHAEL(Morrow, 1991)The jubilee tides are coming, and the
heavily populated lowlands of the planet Miranda are about to be drowned.
Entire cities must relocate to the highlands. Against this chaotic
background a government agent known only as the bureaucrat searches for
the outlaw Gregorian who, although locally rumored to be a magician, is
actually the possessor of stolen and very dangerous nanotechnology.
Swanwick presents a marvelously complex world in a very small space,
filling it with finely drawn characters, superb stylistic flourishes,
tantric sex, literary allusions galore, and fascinating bits of cybernetic
technology, including an almost magical artificial intelligence briefcase
and a government office complex located exclusively in virtual reality.
For similar literary excellence, albeit on a much larger scale, compare
Dan Simmons's HYPERION. Nebula winner, 1991. See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

Of Men and Monsters
TENN, WILLIAM (pseud. of Philip Klass)(Ballantine, 1968)After Earth is
invaded and colonized by gigantic aliens, humanity is driven to live a
ratlike existence within the walls of the invaders' dwellings. Years
later, a few courageous human beings steal an alien spaceship and head for
the stars. A fine novel by a talented writer who largely dropped out of
the field in the late 1960s and whose work is little remembered today.
Compare Thomas M. Disch's The Genocides (1965) and Gregory Benford's Great
Sky River. See also INVASION

The Gate to Women's Country
TEPPER, SHERI S.(Doubleday, 1988)After the nuclear war women rebuilt
society with themselves in control of all government, commerce,
agriculture, and art. The men live in garrisons outside the city walls
devoting themselves to games, parades, military training, and occasional,
strictly controlled, small-scale wars. When they come of age, boys are
given the choice of leaving the city to join the men or remaining as
servants. One young woman takes exception to this system and runs away
with her male lover. Although Tepper has occasionally been criticized for
the stridency of her message,The Gate to Women's Country is in reality a
subtle and sophisticated novel. Compare Joan Slonczewski'sA Door Into
Ocean and Eleanor Arnason's A WOMAN OF THE IRON PEOPLE. Contrast David
Brin's Glory Season (1993) and Orson Scott Card's The Memory of Earth
(1992). See also FEMINISM

Her Smoke Rose Up Forever: The Great Years of James Tiptree, Jr.
TIPTREE, JAMES, JR. (pseud. of Alice Sheldon)(Arkham, 1990)More than 500
pages of the best fiction of one of the best short story writers in the
genre, including such award winners as "The Women Men Don't See," "Love Is
the Plan, the Plan Is Death," "The Screwfly Solution," and "Houston,
Houston, Do You Read?" Among Tiptree's other fine collections are Ten
Thousand Light Years From Home (1973), Warm Worlds and Otherwise (1975),
Star Songs of an Old Primate (1978), Out of the Everywhere and Other
Extraordinary Visions(1981), the World Fantasy Award-winning Tales of the
Quintana Roo(1986), The Starry Rift (1986), and Crown of Stars (1988). Her
most effective stories seem motivated by outrage, using SF motifs to set
up situations in which the injustices and tragedies of our world are
magnified. Scientism, cruelty, and sexism are all attacked. Among those
writers currently publishing, the closest in spirit to Tiptree may well be
Sheri Tepper. Compare her Grass and its sequels. Compare also Joanna
Russ's EXTRA(ORDINARY) PEOPLE . See also OPTIMISM AND PESSIMISM

The Weapon Shops of Isher
VAN VOGT, A(LFRED) E(LTON)(Greenberg, 1951)The bibliographic history of
this work is complex. Two short stories, "The Seesaw" and "The Weapon
Shop" appeared in Astounding in 1941 and 1942. These were incorporated
with a magazine version of "The Weapon Shops of Isher" (Thrilling Wonder,
1949), plus new material, to make up a book of the same title. However, a
magazine version of "The Weapon Makers," originally a sequel to the two
short stories, appeared in Astounding in 1943; then that story, even
though published before "The Weapon Shops of Isher," was rewritten to make
it a sequel to Shops; a publishing history that matches the intricacy of
van Vogt's plots. Greenberg published The Weapon Makers as a sequel in
1952. The National Rifle Association should love this series about the
Weapon Shops with their slogan "The right to buy weapons is the right to
be free." A van Vogtian superhero named Hedrock defends the Shops against
the machinations of the wily Empress Innelda . . . but it turns out that
he, Hedrock, centuries ago founded the Empire in the first place, as well
as the Shops. So schizoid a balance between LIBERTARIANISM and
authoritarianism may unconsciously say more about our own culture than
about that of van Vogt's far future.

The Dragon Masters
VANCE, JACK (pseud. of John Holbrook Vance)(Ace, 1963) Recommended ed.:
Gregg, 1976Hugo for best novella, 1962. At the edge of the galaxy, what is
possibly the last human-controlled world is periodically invaded by the
lizardlike "Basics"; in the interim, the humans fight each other. The
Basics use as their troops GENETICALLY ENGINEERed humans; the planet's
human defenders deploy dragons, of several sizes and degrees of ferocity,
which have been developed from "Basics" eggs. However, no summary can do
justice to the richness of Vance's atmospherics. Critics have pigeonholed
his style as "baroque"; anyhow, it is uniquely his. This book is a
landmark in the transformation of SF away from both Golden Age and 1950s
themes, yet in a different direction from the emerging "New Wave." The
advent of the dragon as a popular theme, foreshadowing Anne McCaffrey's
"Weyr Search" (Hugo winner, 1968) and its many sequels. The Gregg edition
features an introduction by Norman Spinrad.

The Last Castle
VANCE, JACK(Ace, 1967)A novella in which FAR-FUTURE Earth is recolonized
by humans who establish themselves as an aristocracy supported by alien
underclasses, but become vulnerable to revolution. Elegant exoticism with
an underlying political message. Compare Cordwainer Smith's Norstrilia.
Hugo winner, 1967; Nebula winner, 1966

The Persistence of Vision
VARLEY, JOHN(Dial, 1978) U.K. title: In the Hall of the Martian Kings,
1978The first of Varley's short story collections, followed by The Barbie
Murders and Other Stories (1980) and Blue Champagne (1986). The title
story (Nebula winner, 1978; Hugo winner, 1979) is a parable in which men
are so alienated that the path of true enlightenment is reserved for the
handicapped. "In the Hall of the Martian Kings" has castaways on Mars
saved by the advent of miraculous life-forms. Varley almost always deals
in extremes, and the fervent inventiveness of his early stories made them
very striking. Compare the short fiction of James Tiptree, Jr. See also
PLANETARY ROMANCE

A Journey to the Center of the Earth (Voyage au centre de la terre)
VERNE, JULES(1864) Recommended trans. by Robert Baldick, Penguin,
1965.More than half the book is given to the preliminaries before the
actual descent begins, the first two chapters relying on a standard point
of departure, the discovery of a manuscript giving the location of the
caverns in Iceland. The narrative shows Verne's intense care in presenting
the latest scientific thought of his age, while the sighting of the
plesiosaurus and the giant humanoid shepherding mammoths indicates how
well he incorporated lengthy imaginary episodes to flesh out the factual
report. See also HOLLOW EARTH
================================================ From the Earth to the
Moon (De la terre a la lune)
VERNE, JULES(1865) Recommended trans. by Walter James Miller, Crowell,
1978The influence of Poe's "Hans Pfaall" on this novel by Verne remains
uncertain, for most of the narrative is given to building a cannon and
locating the site from which the shot is to be made. The actual shot
(flight) provides the climactic action of the novel. Not until Round the
Moon (Autour de la lune) (1870) did the readers learn that because of
deflection by a second earthly moon (Verne's invention) the ship merely
orbited the MOON and splashed down in the Pacific. Since the dark side of
the Moon was invisible to them, the voyagers saw nothing of it. That fact
raises a question about Verne's imagination: did he have to depend on
factual sources for his works? In this case, like Edgar Allan Poe and
Richard Adams Locke, he may have pulled his own hoax, for there existed a
long tradition of lunar descriptions. See also FANTASTIC VOYAGES

The Snow Queen
VINGE, JOAN D(ENNISON)(Dial, 1980)A colorful amalgam of SF and heroic
fantasy borrowing the structure of Hans Christian Andersen's famous story,
set on a barbarian world exploited by technologically superior
outworlders, against the background of a fallen galactic empire. The
convoluted plot makes heavy use of ideas drawn from Robert Graves's
classic The White Goddess. World's End (1984), a more modest sequel,
relates the adventures of an important secondary character from the first
book. The Summer Queen (1991) ties together plot threads from both of the
previous novels. Lacking the fairytale-like qualities of The Snow Queen,
it is a well-done but somewhat more conventional story of planetary
intrigue and interstellar politics. Compare Frank Herbert's DUNE and Mary
Gentle's GOLDEN WITCHBREED. Hugo winner, 1981. See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

A Fire Upon the Deep
VINGE, VERNOR(Tor, 1992)The Milky Way is divided into four concentric
zones, the Unthinking Depths, the Slow Zone, the Beyond, and the
Transcend. Inherent in the basic physics of these zones are limitations to
intelligence; intellect increases as one moves outward. Humanity,
originally from the Slow Zone, is merely one of uncounted races on the
Known Net. It is a mark of our success, however, that we have planted
thriving colonies well into the Beyond. A human research team exploring
the edge of the Transcend accidentally releases a Power, a malevolent
superbeing that begins laying waste to the galaxy, wiping out entire
intelligent species in a matter of days. Two human children, survivors of
the accidental release of the Power, hold the key to its defeat, but they
have been shipwrecked on a distant planet on the edge of the Slow Zone and
their rescue will be difficult. Vinge's plot is big and bold, almost in
the manner of E. E. Smith, but his scientific content is quite
sophisticated and his character development is solid. His doglike aliens,
with their limited group minds, are endlessly fascinating. Compare David
Brin's STARTIDE RISING . Hugo winner, 1993. See also GALACTIC EMPIRES

True Names
VINGE, VERNOR(Bluejay, 1984)Novella first published in 1981. Clever
computer hackers have established their own fantasy world within the data
matrix of the world's computers, where they can work mischief and enjoy
themselves-until someone (or maybe something) tries to take over the world
and the hero, blackmailed into cooperating with the FBI, has to stop the
rot. A lively and fascinating extrapolation of the idea that advanced
technology opens up the opportunities traditionally associated with
wizardry. A precursor of William Gibson's NEUROMANCER . See also CYBERPUNK

Slaughterhouse-Five; or, The Children's Crusade
VONNEGUT, KURT(Delacorte, 1969)Billy Pilgrim survives the Dresden
firestorm as a POW but subsequently becomes unstuck in time after being
kidnapped by Tralfamadorians and caged with a blue movie starlet. Thus he
learns that everything is fixed and unalterable, and that one simply has
to make the best of the few good times one has. A masterpiece, in which
Vonnegut penetrated to the heart of the issues developed in his earlier
absurdist fabulations. A key work of modern SF. See also ABSURDIST SF

Night of the Cooters: More Neat Stories
WALDROP, HOWARD(Ursus, 1990)Most recent collection, following Howard Who?
(1986) and All About Strange Monsters of the Recent Past (1987; U.S.
paperback, Strange Monsters of the Recent Past , 1991, adds novella "A
Dozen Tough Jobs"), gathering ten stories from the eighties. All are
outrageously imagined and narrated with scathingly deadpan humor. The
title story retells H. G. Wells's War of the Worlds in a Texas setting;
"Thirty Minutes Over Broadway" recreates the atmosphere of early comic
books; "French Scenes" hilariously applies sampling/mixing technologies to
film. The three collections are filled with deceptively lightweight but
ingeniously crafted gems, marking Waldrop as one of best new short story
writers of the eighties. Compare stories of R. A. Lafferty. See also
FABULATION

The Flies of Memory
WATSON, IAN(Gollancz, 1990)Aliens who look very much like human-sized
flies visit the Earth and spend most of their time viewing our great works
of art and architecture, as well as our natural wonders. They say their
purpose is simply to record what they're seeing, but then some of the
objects begin to disappear, including a significant part of the city of
Munich. Compare Mark S. Geston's Mirror to the Sky (1992). See also
PERCEPTION

The Island of Dr. Moreau
WELLS, H(ERBERT) G(EORGE)(Heinemann, 1896) Variorum ed. by Robert
Philmus, Univ. of Georgia, 1993Reading Moreau as a version of the
Frankenstein myth overlooks the fact that, unlike Faustus or Victor
Frankenstein, Moreau has no sense of guilt or controlling humanity. He is
the most terrible of the three and cannot be called a tragic hero. Both in
the narrator Pendrick and the "Beast People," Wells shows the uneasy
tension between "natural" and "civilized" humanity. "The Law" satirizes
any attempt to codify religio-moral concepts intended to curb the natural
man. Wells emphasizes through his satire after Moreau's death that only a
fragile shell of civilization restrains humanity from its natural
bestiality. This thrust undercuts the long-time romantic idealization of
the natural man. Compare Brian W. Aldiss's Moreau's Other Island (U.K.,
1980; U.S. title: An Island Called Moreau, 1981). See also DEVOLUTION

The War of the Worlds
WELLS, H(ERBERT) G(EORGE)(Heinemann, 1898) A Critical Edition of The War
of the Worlds, ed. by David Y. Hughes and Harry M. Geduld, Indiana Univ.
Press, 1993The dramatic effectiveness of the novel lies in the detailed
realism with which Wells destroys Richmond, Kingston, and Wimbledon. He
brings horror to very familiar doorsteps. Perhaps more than any of his
other works, this dramatizes humanity's fragile place in the universe, a
theme that obsessed him from the first and that he desperately tried to
communicate to his contemporaries. Filmed in 1953, its most memorable
dramatization was the 1938 Orson Welles broadcast. See also INVASION

The Infinity Box
WILHELM, KATE(Harper, 1975)Perhaps Wilhelm's best early short story
collection, including the fine title novella and "April Fool's Day
Forever," the latter presenting a characteristic Wilhelm theme: a new and
promising discovery with tragic side effects. The earlier collections, The
Downstairs Room (1968) and Abyss (1971), also have some strong material;
the former includes "The Planners" (Nebula winner, 1968), one of many
convincing stories of SCIENTISTS at work in the forefront of genetic and
behavioral research. Other collections are Somerset Dreams and Other
Fictions (1978); Listen, Listen (1981); Children of the Wind (1989), which
includes the Nebula Award-winning "The Girl Who Fell Into the Sky" and the
Nebula-nominated "The Gorgon Field"; and And the Angels Sing (1992), which
features the Nebula-winning "Forever Yours, Anna." Wilhelm has no peer as
a writer of realistic near-future SF stories examining the human
implications of possible biological discoveries. Compare Karen Joy
Fowler's ARTIFICIAL THINGS .

Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang
WILHELM, KATE(Harper, 1976)Ecocatastrophe destroys the United States, but
a family of survivalists comes through the crisis, using CLONING
techniques to combat a plague of sterility. But are their descendants
really victors in the struggle for existence, or has their artificial
selection simply delivered them into a different kind of existential
sterility? Compare Frank Herbert's Hellstrom's Hive (1973) and Pamela
Sargent's Cloned Lives (1976). Hugo winner, 1977

This Immortal
ZELAZNY, ROGER(Ace, 1966)Expanded from a shorter version titled "And Call
Me Conrad" (Hugo winner, 1966). The superhuman hero must defend an
extraterrestrial visitor against the many dangers of a wrecked Earth where
mutation has reformulated many mythical entities. A fascinating
interweaving of motifs from SF and mythology-perhaps the most successful
of Zelazny's several exercises in that vein. Compare Samuel R. Delany's
THE EINSTEIN INTERSECTION. See also MYTHOLOGY

The Doors of His Face, The Lamps of His Mouth...
Full title: The Doors of His Face, The Lamps of His Mouth, and Other
Stories ZELAZNY, ROGER(Doubleday, 1971)A fine collection; the title story
(Nebula winner, 1965) concerns a man facing up to his fears in the shape
of a Venerian sea monster, and "A Rose for Ecclesiastes" is a poignant
story about a man who unwittingly brings faith to a Martian race on the
brink of extinction. The earlier collection, Four for Tomorrow (1967), is
equally good, but two subsequent short story volumes, My Name Is Legion
(1976) and The Last Defender of Camelot (1980), are weaker, although the
former does feature "Home Is the Hangman" (Hugo winner, 1976)-a
suspenseful story about an enigmatic robot executioner. Zelazny's most
recent collections are Unicorn Variations (1983), which features "Unicorn
Variation" (Hugo winner; 1981), and Frost and Fire (1989), which contains
"Permafrost" (Hugo winner, 1986) and "24 Views of Mt. Fuji by Hokusai"
(Hugo winner, 1985). See also PLANETARY ROMANCE

The Heat Death of the Universe and Other Stories
ZOLINE, PAMELA(Women's Press, 1988) Brit. title: Busy About the Tree of
Life, 1988Zoline doesn't write very much, but what she does produce is
superb. Her first story, "The Heat Death of the Universe," was hailed as a
masterpiece when it appeared in New Worlds in 1967. In the following
decades, however, she published only three more stories. This first
collection includes five stories, all of Zoline's previously published
fiction plus the new title story, a cutting satire on evolution. Compare
Langdon Jones's The Eye of the Lens and Pat Cadigan's Patterns . See also
NEW WAVE

No Enemy But Time
BISHOP, MICHAEL(Timescape, 1982)A strange, alienated child has lurid
dreams of the Pleistocene era, and discovers the truth of them when he
becomes a TIME TRAVELer in adulthood. He joins forces with a band of
habiline protohumans and fathers a child, which he brings back to the
present. Brilliant and memorable, written with great conviction. Compare
Vercors's You Shall Know Them. Nebula winner, 1982

JEM: The Making of Utopia
POHL, FREDERIK(St. Martin's, 1979)A new planet is ripe for exploitation
by Earth's three power blocs: food-exporting nations, oil-exporting
nations, and people's republics. Three species of intelligent natives
enter into appropriate associations with the three colonizing groups, and
are thus drawn into the web of conflicts and compromises that reproduces
all the evils of earthly politics. A cynical ideological counterweight to
stories of human/alien cooperation along the lines of Poul Anderson's
People of the Wind (1973). See also COLONIZATION OF OTHER WORLDS

The Legion of Time
WILLIAMSON, JACK(Fantasy, 1952)A classic of pulp SF in which a small army
of soldiers of fortune is co-opted into a war between alternate futures to
settle which of them will really exist. The gaudy costume drama is
sustained by the power of the central idea, which was new in 1938 when the
novel was serialized in Astounding. See also TIME TRAVEL

Slan
VAN VOGT, A(LFRED) E(LTON)(Arkham, 1946)The author's first novel-length
work, serialized in Astounding in 1940, was also one of the first SF
stories from the magazines to make it into hardcover publication.
According to editor John Campbell, van Vogt used a "trick" to solve the
problem of how a merely human writer convincingly describes a superhuman
being who by definition is beyond human comprehension: compare Stanley G.
Weinbaum, The New Adam ; Olaf Stapledon, Odd John . The trick was to cast
the superbeing as a 9-year-old boy on the lam from the human dictator's
cops, and tell the story as a don't-pause-for-breath chase sequence.
Another explanation, offered by van Vogt himself at the 1946 Worldcon, was
that he took the interstellar alien monster viewpoint character he had
used in several previous stories, made it sympathetic, and installed it in
a human body. Whatever the explanation, it worked, in 1940, 1946, and
1951; the reader will have to decide whether it still works today. Simon &
Schuster published a revised edition, in 1951, but the first edition is
preferred. (Note: SIan, The Voyage of the Space Beagle, and The World of
Null-A were assembled as Triad: Three Complete Science Fiction Novels,
Simon & Schuster, 1959.) See also SUPERMAN

Stand on Zanzibar
BRUNNER, JOHN(Doubleday, 1968)A complex novel borrowing techniques from
John Dos Passos and ideas from Marshal McLuhan and other 1960s
commentators to provide a multifaceted image of an overpopulated near
future. Clever, highly detailed, and frequently very witty, the book is a
successful experiment and one of the key works of the period. Compare A
Torrent of Faces (also 1968) by James Blish and Norman L. Knight. Hugo
winner, 1969. See also OVERPOPULATION

Looking Backward: A.D. 2000-1887
BELLAMY, EDWARD(Ticknor, 1888)Without doubt the most famous of the
American UTOPIAS, this was the progenitor of several hundred works, both
in the United States and Europe, as individuals sided with Bellamy or
attacked him. Science is incidental to the text, although technology has
made the utopian state possible. The controversial issue centered on
socialism. See Roemer's The Obsolete Necessity (1976) for the most
detailed contemporary discussion of Bellamy and the United States in
utopian literature at the end of the century. For very different
treatments of socialism, see William Morris's News from Nowhere , Ignatius
Donnelly's Caesar's Column , and Jack London's The Iron Heel .

A Million Open Doors
BARNES, JOHN(Tor, 1992)The Thousand Cultures, once separated by
interstellar distances, are now being connected by instantaneous matter
transmission, and each formerly isolated planet is going through intense
culture shock. Giraut, who comes from a high-tech, pseudomedieval culture
of duels, troubadours, and chivalry, finds himself employed on Caledony, a
grim, no-frills world run according to the utilitarian dictates of
Rational Christianity. The clash of cultures is fascinating, though too
much of the novel's action occurs offstage. Compare Robert A. Heinlein's
BEYOND THIS HORIZON . See also UTOPIAS

Unconquered Countries
RYMAN, GEOFF(St. Martin's Press, 1994)Four novellas, three set in
troubled societies in the near future and a fourth in a far-future
galactic milieu, each dealing in different ways with the subversive nature
of sexuality, the ambivalent responses of the individual to
well-intentioned oppressors, and the pain of exercising one's conscience.
"The Unconquered Country," Ryman's best-known work, relates the horrific
story of Third Child, whose agrarian society is devastated when a distant
superpower arms its enemy as part of an uncomprehended geopolitical
strategy. The story, an unmistakable allegory for the tragedy of Cambodia,
retains its power despite an occasional mawkishness. "Fan," perhaps the
best in the book, tells of an unskilled and disenfranchised young woman
named Billie, whose bleak life as a single mother is ambiguously redeemed
by her years-long infatuation with a piece of interactive software
designed to mimic the responses of a revered pop singer. "A Fall of
Angels," the longest and earliest story, is more promising than
accomplished, but the other three stories are beautifully written and
deeply felt, and stand among the finest long stories in recent science
fiction. Compare Gwyneth Jones's DIVINE ENDURANCE and WHITE QUEEN. (GF)
See also WAR and COMPUTERS

Use of Weapons
BANKS, IAIN M.(Macdonald, 1990)Already widely known for his intense and
emotionally charged mainstream novels, Banks began in 1987 to write a
series of violent but ironic and sophisticated SPACE OPERAS. The Culture,
a wealthy and peaceful high-tech civilization, has reached the state of
total freedom from political oppression or material needs, and its members
spend most of their time exploring the universe in vast interstellar
ships. Most of the novels in this series-which includes Consider Phlebas
(1987), The Player of Games (1988), The State of the Art (1989), and
Against A Dark Background (1993)-confront the Culture with less fortunate
civilizations that still engage in savage behavior, which various Culture
agents must deal with. Consider Phlebas, the first in the series, follows
a deadly mercenary in his doomed campaign against the Culture, while Use
of Weapons takes a Culture secret agent through a series of disastrous
campaigns that leave him emotionally devastated, and call into question
the Culture's morally privileged position. For a different look at the
dynamics of interstellar civilizations, compare Vernor Vinge's A FIRE UPON
THE DEEP and John Barnes's A MILLION OPEN DOORS. (GF)

Synners
CADIGAN, PAT(Bantam, 1991)In near-future United States, an obsessed video
artist pioneers brain-socket implants that allow electronic "uploading" of
consciousness, but the artist suffers a stroke while psychically online,
releasing a destructive virus into the worldwide computer network. A loose
fraternity of teen hackers, aging rock-and-rollers, and corporate moguls
struggles to eradicate the virus and restore the "crashed" system. Tense
and complex, brilliantly wedding CYBERPUNK with the disaster story; along
with Mindplayers (1987) and Fools (1992), this establishes Cadigan as a
visionary explorer of high technology, pop culture, and cyborg
consciousness. Compare Norman Spinrad's Little Heroes and Marc Laidlaw's
Kalifornia.

The Shadow of the Torturer
WOLFE, GENE(Simon & Schuster, 1980)The first volume of The Book of the
New Sun, a superb four-volume novel completed in The Claw of the
Conciliator (1981; Nebula winner, 1981), The Sword of the Lictor (1982),
and The Citadel of the Autarch (1983). SF and fantasy motifs are combined
here in a far-future scenario akin to Jack Vance's THE DYING EARTH , but
much more ambitious; planetary resources are exhausted and civilization is
in the final stages of decline. The hero, Severian, is a disgraced
torturer who embarks on a long journey, becoming involved with a religious
order that preserves a relic of a long-gone redeemer, and eventually with
a plan to renew the Sun. A rich, many-layered story; the detail and
integrity of the imagined world invite comparison with Frank Herbert's
Dune and J. R. R. Tolkien's "Middle Earth," but it is a unique literary
work that transcends issues of categorization. The Urth of the New Sun
(1987), a separate novel detailing Severian's later, off-Urth quest for
transcendence, is a lesser, but still worthwhile story. Nightside the Long
Sun (1993), first volume of The Book of the Long Sun, is set on an
extremely baroque generation starship and supposedly has connections to
the earlier series, though they aren't yet apparent. See also FAR FUTURE

The Last Starship From Earth
BOYD, JOHN (pseud. of Boyd Upchurch)(Weybright & Talley, 1968)An
alternate Earth is ruled by a dictatorship that employs religion and the
insights of social science to secure its hegemony, exporting dissidents to
the planet Hell. The hero plans to save the world by striking at the very
heart of the despised order, preventing Christ's conquest of Rome. Clever
development of an interesting premise. Compare Brian Earnshaw's Planet in
the Eye of Time (1968). See also ALTERNATE WORLDS

The First Men in the Moon
WELLS, H(ERBERT) G(EORGE)(Bowen-Merrill, 1901)At first this seems the
most traditional of Wells's romances because of its inclusion of so many
conventions, including negative gravity. The Selenites have evolved a
highly complex and insectlike social order. The confrontation between
Cavor and The Grand Lunar owes much to Jonathan Swift in that humanity is
found wanting in terms of the Lunar's concept of rational norms. Wells
criticizes the Selenite specialization. Cavor is destroyed by his
inquiring intellect; his companion, Bedford, is saved by his
individuality. See also MOON

War With the Newts
CAPEK, KAREL (Allen & Unwin, 1937) Trans. by M. Weatherall and R.
Weatherall of Valkas mloky, 1936This novel is basically an elaboration of
the theme of R.U.R.The newts are an alien species liberated from their
subterranean home by an accident. They begin to learn human ways, and
learn them all too well. Eventually, they replace their models, providing
in the meantime a particularly sharp caricature of human habits and
politics. Slightly long winded, but remains the most effective of Capek's
works. See also APES AND CAVEMEN

The Quiet Pools
KUBE-MCDOWELL, MICHAEL P.(Ace, 1990)The purpose of the Diaspora Project
is to send humanity to the stars. One starship has already left and a
second, the Memphis, is nearly completed. Many people are opposed to the
project, however, in part because of the enormous cost and in part because
of the ecological damage humanity might do to another planet. Anti-Project
terrorism has become common. Chris McCutcheon, an archivist working on the
Memphis's library, but not himself scheduled to take the journey, must
make up his own mind as to the rightness of the Diaspora Project. He must
also unravel the frightening biological secret that makes the project a
necessity. Compare Vonda McIntyre's Starfarers (1989). See also SPACE
FLIGHT

An Alien Light
KRESS, NANCY(Arbor, 1987)Humanity is at war with the alien Ged and
apparently winning. Unable to understand the human propensity for
violence, the Ged conduct an experiment on two isolated and primitive
human societies that are hereditary enemies, hoping to uncover the key to
defeating a more advanced human foe. They build a gigantic maze-like
structure, lure humans from both cultures into it, and then study their
interactions. Kress's characters are well developed and sympathetically
portrayed. Her ideas on the nature of human violence are thoughtful,
though she differs from many of the recent feminist SF writers who have
examined the issue. Contrast Sheri S. Tepper's THE GATE TO WOMEN'S COUNTRY
and her Raising the Stones. See also PSYCHOLOGY

The Robots of Dawn
ASIMOV, ISAAC(Phantasia, 1983)The heroes of Asimov's earlier robot
detective stories, The Caves of Steel and The Naked Sun , undertake a new
investigation on the utopian world of Aurora, where men live in harmony
with their machines. The murder mystery becomes a peg on which to hang
part of the argument connecting the robot series with the Foundation
series. The argument is further extended in Robots and Empire (1985), in
which robots renegotiate the famous laws of robotics and set humankind on
the road to galactic empire. Prolix, but better connected with their
antecedents than the new Foundation novels. See also ROBOTS and CRIME AND
PUNISHMENT

The Remaking of Sigmund Freud
MALZBERG, BARRY N(ORMAN)(Ballantine, 1985)A fix-up novel featuring an
alternate world where Freud psychoanalyzes Emily Dickinson from afar and
is assassinated by a disappointed patient, and a future where he is
reincarnated aboard a spaceship to save its crew members from the kind of
extraterrestrial angst that was suffered by the protagonist of Beyond
Apollo . Lacks the fluency of Malzberg's early novels but gains in
complexity by way of compensation. Compare Jeremy Leven's Satan (1982).
See also ABSURDIST SF

Winterlong
HAND, ELIZABETH(Bantam, 1990)Hand's first novel features gorgeous prose
reminiscent of Gene Wolfe and an exotic and decadent setting, the City of
the Trees in the Northeastern Federated Republic of America, in essence a
far-future Washington, D.C., half destroyed by global warming, biological
warfare, and time. Among the characters are Wendy Wanders, half-mad victim
of a government-sponsored parapsychology program, and Margalis Tast'annin,
the Mad Aviator, hero of the Archipelago Conflict. Tast'annin has been
sent to close down the parapsychology program and execute all those
involved in it. When Wendy escapes, he must pursue her through the
nightmarish City. Two loose sequels to Winterlong are Aestival Tide (1992)
and Icarus Descending (1993). Compare Geoff Ryman's THE CHILD GARDEN and
Storm Constantine's The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit. See also
HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

Hell's Pavement
KNIGHT, DAMON (FRANCIS)(Lion, 1955) Variant title: Analogue Men, Berkley,
1962The coming of a bland totalitarianism that does not need to resort to
the crude tortures of a Nineteen Eighty-Four was a favorite theme in 1950s
SF. This novel also exemplifies a political theme we have heard in
mainstream life more recently: the unintended consequences of successful
action. Disturbed individuals are provided with "analogues" within their
own psyches that prevent them from antisocial or dysfunctional behavior.
The motive for such therapy is exemplary: to forestall the alcoholic from
drinking, the kleptomaniac from stealing, the pedophile from molesting.
Then it goes on to mass treatment against crimes of violence and
immunization from corruption for all candidates for public office, and it
is a short step from there to conditioning against any attempt to
overthrow the government. The inevitable tyranny that results permeates
the entire society except for an underground of "immunes" who cannot
respond to such therapy. Compare Anthony Burgess, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE ;
contrast B. F. Skinner, Walden Two . See also CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

The New World: An Epic Poem
TURNER, FREDERICK(Princeton Univ. Press, 1985)Narrative poem that begins
in A.D. 2376, in a fragmented America riven by war and choked by energy
shortages. New York City lies in rubble-but an intellectual aristocracy of
Free Counties tenders future hope. Written in unrhymed, five-stressed
lines, by an English professor, Shakespeare scholar, and science fiction
novelist (A Double Shadow, 1978). Turner's several POETRY collections
contain occasional SF entries; and his Genesis: An Epic Poem (1988) is
another futuristic chronicle, featuring a trip to Mars, which one day may
become habitable to humans. Compare Harry Martinson, Diane Ackerman.

Transfigurations
BISHOP, MICHAEL(Berkley, 1979)Expanded from the novella, "Death and
Designation Among the Asadi." One of the more impressive SF novels using
perspectives and themes drawn from ANTHROPOLOGY to aid depiction of an
enigmatic alien culture. Compare Ursula K. Le Guin's THE WORD FOR WORLD IS
FOREST.

Strangers
DOZOIS, GARDNER(Berkley, 1978)Expansion of a novella tracking the love
affair between a man and an alien woman whose reproductive BIOLOGY is
exotic. A virtual reprise of Philip Jose Farmer's THE LOVERS , with added
depth of characterization.

Orbit
KNIGHT, DAMON F., ED. Putnam (nos. 1-12), Berkley (no. 13), Harper (nos.
14-21), 1966-1980The last of the pioneering original ANTHOLOGY series.
Knight's relationship with the Clarion workshops ensured that he was often
in a position to find talented new writers as their careers were just
getting under way, and the series played a major role in establishing the
careers of several major writers, including Kate Wilhelm and Gene Wolfe.
R. A. Lafferty was also extensively featured. An early preference for
material with particularly polished literary style gradually gave way to
an interest in esoteric material, sometimes without much discernible
speculative content, but the series was a worthy experiment whose early
volumes feature some very fine material.

The Ragged World: A Novel of the Hefn on Earth
MOFFETT, JUDITH(St. Martin's, 1991)A starship commanded by the alien
Gafr, but crewed by a different race, the Hefn, returns to Earth to
retrieve Hefn mutineers left behind centuries ago and to stop humanity's
destruction of the ecosystem. The aliens decree that no more human babies
will be born until we cease polluting. Originally a series of short
stories, including two award nominees, this fixup novel is a powerful
indictment of humanity's ability to foul its own nest. In the more unified
sequel, Time, Like an Ever-Rolling Stream (1992), two young people grow up
in the more primitive world that has resulted from the Hefn's stay on
Earth. Moffett continues her ecological theme, but also deals movingly
with the topic of sexual abuse. Compare Joan Slonczewski's The Wall Around
Eden. See also POLLUTION

Good News From Outer Space
KESSEL, JOHN(Tor, 1989)The millennium is at hand and America is in bad
economic and spiritual shape. To make matters worse, the aliens have
apparently landed, though they refuse to show themselves and their
purposes remain highly ambiguous. At once chilling and very funny, this
novel is notable for its portrayal of aliens whose motives are beyond our
comprehension. For other portraits of millennial fervor, compare James
Morrow's Only Begotten Daughter (1990) and Mark Geston's Mirror to the Sky
(1992). See also ABSURDIST SF

Halo
MADDOX, TOM(Tor, 1991)Mikhail Gonzales, an auditor, is dispatched to the
Halo space station to keep an eye on a daring but costly experiment, the
attempt to download the personality of a dying man into the station's
artificial intelligence, Aleph. The experiment is fraught with
difficulties, but things get worse when the corporation that owns both the
station and Aleph decides to pull the plug. Halo features a number of
engaging characters, several of whom are artificial intelligences, and an
engrossing examination of the nature of consciousness. Compare Lisa
Mason's Arachne (1990), David Gerrold's When HARLIE Was One, and Greg
Bear's Queen of Angels . See also CYBERPUNK

10 Story Fantasy
10 Story Fantasy, Spring 1951Published by Avon Periodicals (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1951 Avon Periodicals)

Galileo
Galileo, Sept. 1976 Published by Victor Hugo Publishers Cover
illustrations by Tom Barber (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Avenue Victor Hugo Bookshop, Ltd. (c) 1976
Avenue Victor Hugo Publishers)

Gamma
Gamma, Feb. 1965 Published by Star Press, Inc. Cover illustration by John
Healey (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Star
Press, Inc. (c) 1965 Star Press, Inc.)

Great Science Fiction
Great Science Fiction, Fall 1967 Published by Ultimate Publishing Co.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Ultimate
Publishing Co. (c) 1967 Ultimate Publishing Co.)

Hyphen
Hyphen, March 1962 Published by Walt Willis (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Walt Willis, Publisher. (c) 1962
Walt Willis)

If
If, May-June 1970 Published by Quinn Publishing Co. Cover illustration by
Ken Fagg (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of Galaxy (R). (c) 1970 Quinn Publishing Co.
Inc.)

Imagination Stories of Science and Fantasy
Imagination Stories of Science and Fantasy, Oct. 1950 Published by Clark
Publishing Co. Cover illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Clark Publishing Co. (c) 1950
Clark Publishing Co.)

Imaginative Tales
Imaginative Tales, July 1957 Published by Greenleaf Publishing Co. Cover
illustration by Malcolm Smith (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Greenleaf Publishing Co. (c) 1957 Greenleaf Publishing
Co.)

Infinity Science Fiction
Infinity Science Fiction, July 1957 Published by Royal Publications Cover
illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Royal Publications. (c) 1957 Royal Publications)

International Science Fiction
International Science Fiction, June 1968 Published by Galaxy Publishing
Corp. Cover illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1968 Galaxy Publishing Corporation)

Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, May 1985 Published by Dell
Magazines (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Dell Magazines. (c) 1985 Dell Magazines)

Magazine of Horror
Magazine of Horror, Sept. 1968 Published by Health Knowledge, Inc. Cover
illustration by Virgil Finlay (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Health Knowledge, Inc. (c) 1968 Health Knowledge, Inc.)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Jan. 1953 Published by
Mercury Press/Fantasy House Cover illustration by Alez Schomburg (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1953 Mercury Press)

Marvel Science Stories
Marvel Science Stories, Aug. 1951 Published by Stadium Publishing Corp.
Cover illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1951 Stadium Publishing Corporation)

Most Thrilling Science Fiction Ever Told, The
The Most Thrilling Science Fiction Ever Told, Winter 1970 Published by
Ultimate Publishing Co. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.
, Riverside. (c) 1970 Ultimate Publishing Co.)

New Worlds
New Worlds, No. 191 Published by Michael Moorcock (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover
illustration: Mal Dean. Courtesy of Michael Moorcock. (c) 1969 Michael
Moorcock)

Novae Terrae
Novae Terrae, May 1938 Published by Science Fiction Association Cover
illustration by H.E. Turner (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1938 Science Fiction Association)

Omni
Omni, June 1979 Published by General Media Cover illustration by Don
Dixon (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cover
illustration: Don Dixon / Courtesy of OMNI Magazine. (c) 1979 Omni
Publications International, Ltd.)

Orbit Science Fiction
Orbit Science Fiction, No. 4 Published by Morris S. Latzen (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 19 Morris S.
Latzen)

Original Science Fiction Stories
Original Science Fiction Stories, May 1956 Published by Columbia
Publications, Inc. Cover illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc.
(c) 1956 Columbia Publications, Inc.)

Other Worlds
Other Worlds, Sept. 1936 Published by Gryphon Publications Cover
illustration by Paul Blaisdell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1936 Gryphon Publications)

Out of This World Adventures
Out of This World Adventures, Dec. 1950 Published by Avon Periodicals
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1950 Avon Periodicals)

Overland Monthly
Overland Monthly, June 1890 Published by Overland Monthly Publishing
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1890
Overland Monthly Publishing)

Planet Stories
Planet Stories, Spring 1942 Published by Love Romances Publishing Co.,
Inc. Cover illustration by Leydon Frost (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1942 Love Romances Publishing Co., Inc.)

Psychotic
Psychotic, Nov. 1967 Published by Psychotic Press Cover illustration by
Ron Cobb (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1967 Psychotic Press)

Quandry
Quandry, July 1952 Published by Lee Hoffman Cover illustration by Lee
Hoffman (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1952 Lee Hoffman)

Riverside Quarterly
Riverside Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 4 Published by Students' Union Press
Cover illustration by Vincent Di Fate (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Student's Union Press. )

Rocket Stories
Rocket Stories, July 1953 Published by Space Publications, Inc. Cover
illustration by Alex Schomburg (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Space Publications, Inc.)

Satellite Science Fiction
Satellite Science Fiction, Feb. 1958 Published by Renown Publications
Cover illustration by Alex Schomburg (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1958 Renown Publications)

Saturn
Saturn, March 1957 Published by Candar Publishing Co., Inc. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Candar Publishing
Co., Inc. (c) 1957 Candar Publishing Co., Inc.)

Science Fiction Digest
Science Fiction Digest, Sept.-Oct. 1982 Published by Davis Publications
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1982
Davis Publications, Inc.)

Science Fantasy Yearbook
Science Fantasy Yearbook, 1970 Published by Ultimate Publishing Co.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1970
Ultimate Publishing Co.)

Science Fiction Adventures
Science Fiction Adventures, July 1953 Published by Future Publications,
Inc. Cover illustration by Alex Schomburg (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Future Publications, Inc.
)

Science Fiction Classics
Science Fiction Classics, Summer 1968 Published by Ultimate Publishing
Co. Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1968 Ultimate Publishing Co.)

Science Fiction Monthly
Science Fiction Monthly, Aug. 1951 / No. 12 Published by Hamilton & Co.
(Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. )

Science Fiction Plus
Science Fiction Plus, Dec. 1953 Published by Gernsback Publications, Inc.
Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Gernsback Publications, Inc.)

Science Fiction Quarterly
Science Fiction Quarterly, May 1954 Published by Columbia Publications,
Inc. Cover illustration by Alex Schomburg (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc. (c)
1954 Columbia Publications, Inc.)

Science Stories
Science Stories. Oct. 1953 Published by Bell Publications, Inc. Cover
illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Bell Publications, Inc. (c) 1953 Bell Publications,
Inc.)

Science Wonder Stories
Science Wonder Stories, June 1929 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp.
Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1929 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Science-Fiction Studies
Science-Fiction Studies, Nov. 1992 Published by SF-TH, Inc. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. DePauw University.
(c) 1992 SF-TH, Inc at DePauw University)

Scorpion, The
The Scorpian, Feb. 1975 Published by Seaboard Periodicals, Inc. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1975 Seaboard
Periodicals, Inc.)

Slant
Slant, Winter 1951-52 Published by Oblique House Cover illustration by
James White (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1951 Oblique House)

Space Science Fiction
Space Science Fiction, July 1953 Published by Space Publications, Inc.
Cover illustration by van Dongen (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Space Publications, Inc.)

Space Stories
Space Stories, Feb. 1953 Published by Standard Magazines (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Standard Magazines)

Spaceway
Spaceway, Feb. 1954 Published by Fantasy Publishing Co. Cover
illustration by Mel Hunter (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Illustrator: Mel Hunter. Used by permission of the
artist. (c) Mel Hunter)

Stardate
Stardate, Oct. 1985 / No. 8 Published by Associates International, Inc.
Cover illustration by Vincent Di Fate (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1985 Associates International, Inc.)

Startling Stories
Startling Stories, Aug. 1952 Published by Better Publications Cover
illustration by Earle K. Bergey (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1952 Better Publications, Inc.)

Strange Adventures
Strange Adventures, Aug.-Sept. 1950 Published by National Comics
Publications, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1950 National Comics Publications, Inc.)

Strange Stories
Strange Stories, Feb. 1939 Published by Better Publications (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Better
Publications, Inc. (c) 1939 Better Publications, Inc.)

Strange Tales
Strange Tales, Oct. 1932 Published by The Clayton Magazines, Inc. Cover
illustration by H.W. Wesso (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1932 The Clayton Magazines, Inc.)

Super Science Stories
Super Science Stories, May 1943 Published by Fictioneers, Inc. Cover
illustration by Virgil Finlay (Reprinted by permission of Argosy
Communications, Inc. Copyright 1943 Fictioneers, Inc.)

Super-Science Fiction
Super-Science Fiction, June 1957 Published by Headline Publications Cover
illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1957 Headline Publications)

Suspense
Suspense, Winter 1952 Published by The Farrell Publishing Corp. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1952 The
Farrell Publishing Corp.)

Tales of Tomorrow
Tales of Tomorrow, No. 5 Published by John Spencer & Co. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. John Spencer & Co. )

Thrilling Wonder Stories
Thrilling Wonder Stories, July 1940 Published by Better Publications
Cover illustration by Howard V. Brown (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Better Publications. (c) 1940 Better
Publications, Inc.)

Thrust
Thrust, Winter-Spring 1982 / No. 18 Published by D. Douglas Fratz Cover
illustration by Brad W. Foster (Courtesy of D. Douglas Fratz. (c) 1982 D.
Douglas Fratz)

Tops in Science Fiction
Tops in Science Fiction, Fall 1953 Published by Love Romances Publishing
Co. Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1953 Love Romances Publishing Co., Inc.)

Treasury of Great Science Fiction Stories
Treasury of Great Science Fiction Stories, 1964 / No. 1 Published by
Popular Library (Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1964
Popular Library, Inc.)

Uncanny Tales
Uncanny Tales, May 1940 Published by Manvis Publications, Inc. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1940 Manvis
Publications, Inc.)

Universe Science Fiction
Universal Science Fiction, Dec. 1953 Published by Palmer Publications,
Inc. Cover illustration by Mel Hunter (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Illustrator: Mel Hunter. Used by permission of
the artist. (c) Mel Hunter)

Unknown
Unknown, Sept. 1939 Published by Street & Smith Cover illustration by
H.W. Scott (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1939 Street & Smith)

Vanguard Science Fiction
Vanguard Science Fiction, June 1958 Published by Vanguard Publishing Co.
Cover illustration by Ed Emshwiller (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1958 Vanguard
Publishing Co., )

Vargo Statten Science Fiction Magazine
Vargo Statten Science Fiction Magazine, Jan. 1954 Published by Scion,
Ltd. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1954 Scion, Ltd.)

Venture Science Fiction
Venture, Aug. 1970 Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Bert
Tanner (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1970
Mercury Press)

Vision of Tomorrow
Vision of Tomorrow, Aug. 1970 Published by Ronald E. Graham, Ltd. Cover
illustration by Eddie Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1970 Ronald E. Graham, Ltd.)

Vortex Science Fiction
Vortex Science Fiction, 1953 / Vol. 1, No. 2 Published by Specific
Fiction Corp. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1953 Specific Fiction Corp.)

Vortex Science Fiction
Vortex Science Fiction, 1953 / Vol. 1, No. 1 Published by Specific
Fiction Corp. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1953 Specific Fiction Corp.)

Warhoon
Warhoon, Nov. 1968 Published by Fantasy Amateur Press Association (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1968 Fantasy
Amateur Press Assn.)

Weird Tales
Weird Tales, March 1933 Published by Weird Tales Ltd. Cover illustration
by M. Brundage (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Weird Tales, Ltd. Copyright 1933
Popular Fiction Publishing Co.)

Wonder Stories
Wonder Stories, Dec. 1932 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp. Cover
illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1932 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Wonder Stories
Wonder Stories, 1957 / Vol. 45, No. 1 Published by Better Publications
Cover illustration by Richard Powers (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Better Publications, Inc. (c) 1957 Better
Publications, Inc.)

Wonder Stories Quarterly
Wonder Stories Quarterly, Summer 1930 Published by Stellar Publishing
Corp. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1930 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Worlds Beyond
Worlds Beyond, Dec. 1950 / Vol. 1, No. 1 Published by Hillman
Periodicals, Inc. Cover illustration by Paul Colle (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1950 Hillman Periodicals, Inc.
)

Worlds of Tomorrow
Worlds of Tomorrow, Jan. 1966 Published by Institute for the Development
of the Harmonious Human Cover illustration by McLane (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1966 Galaxy Publishing
Corporation.)

Yandro
Yandro ed. by Robert & Juanita Coulson Cover: Robert & Juanita Coulson
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Robert and Juanita Coulson. (c) 1995 Robert and Juanita Coulson)

Monkey Wrench Gang, The
The Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey Cover: Avon Books, 1975 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1975 Avon Books)

Man with the Broken Ear ,The
The Man with the Broken Ear by Edmond About Cover: Holt & Williams, 1872
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

President John Smith
President John Smith by Frederick Adams Cover: Charles H. Kerr & Co.,
1898 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Sentience
Sentience by Terry A. Adams Cover: DAW Books, 1986 illustration by James
Gurney (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1986 DAW Books, Inc.)

Terror on Planet Ionus
Terror on Planet Ionus by Allen A. Adler Cover: Paperback Library Inc.,
1966 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Paperback Library (c) 1966 Paperback Library Inc.)

Survivalist #1: Total War, The
The Survivalist #1: Total War by Jerry Ahern Cover: Zebra Books, 1981
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Zebra Books.
(c) 1981 Zebra Books (Kensigton Publishing Corp.) )

Seventh Carrier, The
The Seventh Carrier by Peter Albano Cover: Zebra Books, 1983 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Zebra Books. (c)
1983 Zebra Books (Kensigton Publishing Corp.) )

Lunarian Professor, The
The Lunarian Professor by James B. Alexander Cover: James B. Alexander,
1909 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Voyage of the Ark , The
The Voyage of the Ark by F. M. Allen Cover: Ward and Downey, 1888 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Genesis Five
Genesis Five by Henry Wilson Allen Cover: Pyramid, 1970 illustration by
John Schoenherr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1970 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Rhubarb Tree, The
The Rhubarb Tree by Kenneth Allot & Stephen Tait Cover: Cresset Press
Ltd., 1937 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Cresset Press Ltd. (c) 1937 Cresset Press Ltd.)

Notes from the Future
Notes from the Future by Nicolai M. Amosoff Cover: Jonathan Cape, 1971
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1971 Johnathan Cape London)

Magellan
Magellan by Colin Anderson Cover: Sphere Books Ltd., 1971 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Sphere Books Ltd.
(c) 1971 Sphere Books Ltd.)

Strange Adventure of Roger Wilkins, The
The Strange Adventure of Roger Wilkins by R. Andom Cover: Tylston &
Edwards, 1895 illustration by A. Carruthers Gould (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

World's Beginning
World's Beginning by Robert Ardrey Cover: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1944
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Duell,
Sloan and Pearce (c) 1944 Duell, Sloan and Pearce)

Man's Mortality
Man's Mortality by Michael Arlen Cover: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1933
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1933 Doubleday , Doran & Co.)

When the Bells Rang A Tale of What Might Have Been
When the Bells Rang: A Tale of What Might Have Been by Anthony Armstrong
& Bruce Graeme Cover: George G. Harrap & Co., 1943 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. George G. Harrap & Co. (c) 1943
George G. Harrap & Co.)

Grim Caretaker, The
The Grim Caretaker by Eugene Ascher Cover: Strothers Bookshops Ltd., 1944
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Strothers
Bookshops Ltd. (c) 1944 Strothers Bookshops Ltd. (UK))

War-God Walks Again, The
The War-God Walks Again by F. Britten Austin Cover: Doubleday, Page & Co.
, 1926 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used
by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1926 Doubleday, Page & Co.)

Maze Maker, The
The Maze Maker by Michael Ayrton Cover: Bantam, 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1969
Bantam Books)

New Atlantis, The
The New Atlantis by Francis Bacon Cover: Cambridge: At the University
Press, 1900 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
)

Stars Are Too High, The
The Stars Are Too High by Agnew H. Bahnson Cover: Bantam, 1960 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1960 Bantam Books)

Symbiote's Crown
Symbiote's Crown by Scott Baker Cover: Berkley, 1978 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1978 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Kings of Infinite Space
Kings of Infinite Space by Nigel Balchin Cover: Modern Literary Editions,
1967 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Modern
Literary Editions (c) 1967 Modern Literary Editions)

Galactic Convoy
Galactic Convoy by Bill Baldwin Cover: Popular Library, 1987 illustration
by John Berkey (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1987 Popular
Library)

Sell England?
Sell England? by Dacre Balsdon Cover: Eyre & Spottis-Woode, 1936 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Eyre &
Spottis-Woode (c) 1936 Eyre & Spottis-Woode)

Quest of the Absolute
Quest of the Absolute by Honore de Balzac Cover: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1908
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

The Sea is Boiling Hot
The Sea is Boiling Hot by George Bamber Cover: Ace Books, 1971
illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

House-Boat on the Styx, A
A House-Boat on the Styx by John Kendrick Bangs Cover:
HarperCollins/Harper & Bros., 1895 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Use of Weapons
Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks Cover: Bantam, 1990 illustration by Paul
Youll (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used
by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Bantam Books)

Odysseus Solution, The
The Odysseus Solution by Michael A. Banks & Dean R. Lambe Cover: Baen
Books, 1986 illustration by Stephen Hickman (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN
PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1986 Baen Books)

Ashes, Ashes by Rene Barjavel Cover: Doubleday & Co., 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1967 Doubleday)

One Half of the World
One Half of the World by James Barlow Cover: Cassel & Co., 1957 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Cassel l & Co. (c)
1957 Cassel & Co.)

Immortals' Great Quest, The
The Immortals' Great Quest by James William Barlow Cover: Smith, Elder &
Co., 1909 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Interplanetary Hunter
Interplanetary Hunter by Arthur Barnes Cover: Gnome Press, 1956
illustration by Ed Emshwiller & W.I. Van der Poel (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gnome Press (c) 1956 Gnome)

L.P.M.: The End of the Great War
L.P.M.: The End of the Great War by J. Stewart Barney (John Stewart
Barney) Cover: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1915 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of The Putnam Publishing Group. )

Man With Only One Head, The
The Man With Only One Head by Densil Neve Barr Cover: Rich & Cowan, 1955
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Rich &
Cowan (c) 1955 Rich & Cowan (UK))

The Face & the Mask
The Face & the Mask by Robert Barr Cover: Frederick A. Stokes, 1893
illustration by A. Hencke (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Trivana 1
Trivana 1 by Charles Barren & R. Cox Abel Cover: Panther Books, 1966
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1966 Panther
Books)

When the Whites Went
When the Whites Went by Robert Bateman Cover: Brown, Watson Ltd., 1963
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Brown
Watson Limited (c) 1963 Brown Watson Ltd.)

Tik-Tok of Oz
Tik-Tok of Oz by L. Frank Baum Cover: The Reilly & Lee Co., 1914
illustration by John R. Neill (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Secret of the Earth, The
The Secret of the Earth by Charles Willing Beale Cover: F. Tennyson
Neely, 1899 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
)

Peace Under Earth
Peace Under Earth by Paul Beaujon Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1939 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Dodd, Mead & Co.
(c) 1939 Dodd, Mead & Co.)

Howling Man, The
The Howling Man by Charles Beaumont Cover: TOR/Tom Doherty & Associates,
1988 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1988 Tor Books)

Torch , The
The Torch by Jack Bechdolt Cover: Prime Press, 1948 illustration by L.
Robert Tschirky (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Prime Press (c) 1948 Prime Press)

Star Woman, The
The Star Woman by H. Bedford-Jones Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1924 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Dodd, Mead & Co.
(c) 1924 Dodd, Mead & Co.)

One Sane Man, The
The One Sane Man by Francis Beeding Cover: Little, Brown & Co., 1934
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Published
by Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c) 1934 Little, Brown and Company
(Inc.))

Guardsman, The
The Guardsman by P.J. Beese & Todd Hamil Cover: Pageant Books, 1988
illustration by Tom Kidd (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Pageant Books (c) 1988 Pageant Books)

Seventh Bowl, The
The Seventh Bowl by Neil Bell Cover: Collins, 1934 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1934 Collins)

Twenty-five Short Stories
Twenty-five Short Stories by Stephen Vincent Benet Cover: Sun Dial Press,
1943 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Sun
Dial Press (c) 1943 Sun Dial Press)

Thyra
Thyra by Robert Ames Bennet Cover: Henry Holt & Co., 1901 illustration by
E.L. Blumenschein (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Long Way Back, The
The Long Way Back by Margot Bennett Cover: Coward-McCann, 1955 (First
American Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Coward-McCann (c) 1980 Coward, McCann )

Lord of the World
Lord of the World by Robert Hugh Benson Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1908
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Le Sud
Le Sud by Yves Berger Cover: Bernard Grasset Editeur, 1962 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Bernard Grasset
Editeur. (c) 1962 Bernard Grasset Editeur)

Sun Grows Cold, The
The Sun Grows Cold by Howard Berk Cover: Delacorte Press, 1971 (First
Printing) illustration by Mike McIver (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Delecorte Press, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971
Delecorte Press.)

New Race of Devils, The
The New Race of Devils by John Bernard Cover: Anglo-Eastern Publishing
Co., 1921 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Anglo-Eastern Publishing Co. (c) 1921 Anglo-Eastern Publishing Co.)

The Galactic Invaders
The Galactic Invaders by James R. Berry Cover: Laser Books, 1976
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Laser Books (c) 1976 Laser Books)

The A. I. War
The A. I. War by Stephen Ames Berry Cover: TOR/Tom Doherty Associates,
1987 (First Printing) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1987 Tor Books)

Revolt of Man, The
The Revolt of Man by Walter Besant Cover: Collins Clear-Type Press, 1897
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. )

Space Raiders, The
The Space Raiders by Barrington Beverley Cover: Phillip Allan, 1936
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Philip
Allan (c) 1936 Philip Allan)

Space Stadium
Space Stadium by H.U. Bevis Cover: Lenox Hill Press, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lenox Hill Press
(c) 1970 Lenox Hill Press)

The Devil's Dictionary
The Devil's Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce Cover: World Publishing Co.,
1942 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. World
Publishing Co. (c) 1942 World Publishing Co.)

Poison War, The
The Poison War by Ladbroke Black Cover: Stanley Paul & Co., Ltd., 1933
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Stanley
Paul & Co., Ltd. (c) 1933 Stanley Paul & Co., Ltd.)

1957
1957 by Hamish Blair Cover: William Blackwood & Sons, Ltd., 1930 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. William Blackwood
& Sons, Ltd. (c) 1930 William Blackwood & Sons, Ltd.)

Purple Sapphire, The
The Purple Sapphire by Christopher Blayre Cover: Phillip Allan & Co.,
1921 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Philip
Allan & Co. (c) 1921 Philip Allan & Co.)

Man from Mars, The
The Man from Mars by Thomas Blot Cover: Bacon & Co., 1891 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Simultaneous Man, The
The Simultaneous Man by Ralph Blum Cover: Bantam, 1971 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971
Bantam Books)

Red Star, The
The Red Star by Alexander Bogdanov Cover: Indiana University Press, 1984
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Indiana
University Press. (c) 1984 Indiana University Press.)

Sons of the Mammoth
Sons of the Mammoth by Vladimir Bogoraz Cover: Cosmopolitan Book Corp.,
1929 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Cosmopolitan Book Corporation (c) 1929 Cosmopolitan Book Corporation)

White August
White August by John Boland Cover: Michael Joseph, 1953 illustration by
Wildsmith (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Michael Joseph Ltd. (c) 1953 Michael Joseph Ltd.)

Others, The
The Others by Margaret Wander Bonnano Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1990
illustration by Adam Niklewicz (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Cover: Adam Niklewicz. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press.
(c) 1990 St. Martin's Press)

Jehovah's Day
Jehovah's Day by Mary Borden Cover: Heinemann, 1928 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1928 William Heinemann,
London)

Spurious Sun
Spurious Sun by George Borodin Cover: T. Werner Laurie, Ltd., 1948 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. T. Werner Laurie,
Ltd. (c) 1948 T. Werner Laurie, Ltd. London)

Nightmare Collector, The
The Nightmare Collector by Bruce Boston Cover: 2 AM Publications, 1988
illustration by Gregorio Montejo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of 2 A.M. Publications.
(c) 1988 Bruce Boston & Gregorio Montejo. Published by 2 AM Publications.)

World Wrecker, The
The World Wrecker by Sydney J. Bounds Cover: W. Foulsham & Co. Ltd., 1956
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. W. Foulsham
& Co. Ltd. (c) 1956 W. Foulsham & Co. Ltd. London)

Kallocain
Kallocain by Karin Boye Cover: University of Wisconsin Press, 1966 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. University of
Wisconsin Press. (c) 1966 University of Wisconsin Press.)

X People, The
The X People by Vektis Brack Cover: Gannet Press, 1953 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gannet Press (c) 1953 Gannet
Press)

Voyage from Utopia, A
A Voyage from Utopia by John Francis Bray Cover: Lawrence and Wishart
Ltd., 1957 (First Edition) illustration by Brooks (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lawrence and Wishart Ltd. (c) 1957
Lawrence and Wishart Ltd.)

The Girl from Mars
The Girl from Mars by Miles Breuer Cover: Stellar Publishing Corp., 1929
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Stellar Publishing Corporation (c) 1929 Stellar Publising Corp.
)

Purple-6
Purple-6 by Henry Brinton Cover: Avon Books, 1962 (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) 1962 Avon Books)

Purple Plague, The
The Purple Plague by Fenner Brockway Cover: Sampson Low Marston & Co.,
Ltd., 1935 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Sampson Low Marston & Co., Ltd. (c) 1935 Sampson Low Marston & Co., Ltd.
London)

Xorandor
Xorandor by Christine Brooke-Rose Cover: Avon Books, 1988 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1988 Avon Books)

Sky Lords, The
The Sky Lords by John Brosnan Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1988 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with the
permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1988 Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Under the City of Angels
Under the City of Angels by Jerry Earl Brown Cover: Bantam, 1981 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1981 Bantam Books)

Swastika Night
Swastika Night by Murray Constantine (Katharine Burdekin) Cover: Victor
Gallancz Ltd., 1937 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1937
Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Time of the Hawklords, The
The Time of the Hawklords by Michael Butterworth & Michael Moorcock
Cover: Warner Books, 1976 (First US Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner
Books, Inc. (c) 1976 Warner Books, Inc.)

Jonah Watch, The
The Jonah Watch by Jack Cady Cover: Avon Books, 1983 (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) 1983 Avon Books)

White Prophet, The
The White Prophet by Hall Caine Cover: Heinemann, 1921 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1921 William Heinemann,
Ltd. )

Omega Sub #4: Blood Tide
Omega Sub #4: Blood Tide by J.D. Cameron (Mike Jahn) Cover: Avon Books,
1991 (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown
by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1991 Avon Books)

Red Planet, The
The Red Planet by H.J. Campbell Cover: Panther Books, 1953 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1953 Panther Books)

Moonspin
Moonspin by Elmer Carpenter Cover: Caravelle Books/Flagship Book, 1967
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Flagship
Book (c) 1967 Flagship Book )

Ophidian Conspiracy, The
The Ophidian Conspiracy by John F. Carr Cover: Major Books, 1976 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Major Books (c)
1976 Major Books)

Room Beyond, The
The Room Beyond by Robert Spencer Carr Cover: Appleton-Century-Crofts,
Inc., 1948 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Appleton-Century-Croft, Inc. (c) 1948 Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc.)

2010
2010 by Frederic Carrel Cover: T. Werner Laurie Ltd., 1914 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Siren Stars, The
The Siren Stars by Richard and Nancy Carrigan Cover: Pyramid Books, 1971
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1971 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Perilous Descent into a Strange Lost World, The
The Perilous Descent into a Strange Lost World by Bruce Carter Cover:
Bodley Head, 1952 (First Edition) illustration by Tony Weare (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
Century House UK Limited (c) 1952 The Bodley Head )

Icosameron
Icosameron by Giacomo Casanova Cover: Jenna Press, 1986 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Jenna Press (c) 1986 Jenna
Press)

Peacemakers, The
The Peacemakers by Curtis Casewit Cover: Avalon Books, 1960 illustration
by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Thomas Bouregy & Co. - Avalon Books (c) 1960 Avalon
Books)

Star Country, The
The Star Country by MIchael Cassutt Cover: Doubleday, 1986 illustration
by Cathy Hull (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1986 Doubleday)

Satellite E One
Satellite E One by J. Lloyd Castle Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1954 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Dodd, Mead & Co.
(c) 1954 Dodd, Mead & Co.)

6,000 Tons of Gold
6,000 Tons of Gold by Henry Chamberlain Cover: Flood and Vincent
Chautaugua Century Press, 1894 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Red January
Red January by William Chamberlain Cover: Paperback Library, 1964 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Paperback Library
(c) 1964 Paperback Library)

King in Yellow, The
The King in Yellow by Robert William Chambers Cover: F. Tennyson Neely,
1895 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Living Gems, The
The Living Gems by Paul Charkin Cover: Brown, Watson Ltd., 1963 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Brown Watson
Limited (c) 1963 Brown Watson Ltd.)

Jingo, The
The Jingo by George Randolf Chester Cover: Grosset & Dunlap, 1912
illustration by F. Vaux Wilson (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

The Man Who Was Thursday
The Man Who Was Thursday by G.K. Chesterton Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1908
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Marble City, The
The Marble City by R.D. Chetwode Cover: Sampson Low, Marston & Co., 1895
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Riddle of the Sands, The
The Riddle of the Sands by Erskine Childers Cover: T. Nelson & Sons, 1913
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Lost Children, The
The Lost Children by H. Herman Chilton Cover: Hutchinson & Co. Ltd., 1931
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1931 Hutchinson & Co.)

World Unknown, A
A World Unknown by John Clagett Cover: Popular Library, 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1975 Popular Library, Inc.)

Queen Victoria's Bomb
Queen Victoria's Bomb by Ronald Clark Cover: Panther Books, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1967 Panther Books)

Light in the Sky, The
The Light in the Sky by Herbert Clock Cover: Coward-McCann, 1929 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Coward-McCann (c)
1929 Coward-McCann )

Master of His Fate
Master of His Fate by J. MacLaren Cobban Cover: Greenhill, 1890 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Solo Kill
Solo Kill by S.K. Boult Cover: Berkley Medallion, 1977 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1989 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Night of the Toy Dragons, The
The Night of the Toy Dragons by Barney Cohen Cover: Berkley/Berkley
Medallion, 1977 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1977 Berkley Medallion. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Philosophical Corps, The
The Philosophical Corps by Everett B. Cole Cover: Gnome Press, 1961
illustration by W.I. Vander Poel, Jr. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Gnome Press (c) 1961 Grome Press)

Seeker from the Stars
Seeker from the Stars by James Coleman Cover: Berkley/Berkley Medallion,
1967 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1967 Berkley Medallion. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Valley of Eyes Unseen, The
The Valley of Eyes Unseen by Gilbert Collins Cover: Duckworth & Co., 1923
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Duckworth &
Co. (c) 1923 Duckworth & Co.)

Tetrarch
Tetrarch by Alex Comfort Cover: Shambhala, 1980 illustration by Fred
Marcellino (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Shambhala (c) 1980 Shambhala)

Star Spangled Crunch, The
The Star Spangled Crunch by Richard Condon Cover: Bantam, 1974 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1974 Bantam Books)

Nordenholt's Million
Nordenholt's Million by J.J. Connington Cover: Constable & Co. Ltd., 1923
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Constable & Co., London. (c) 1923 Constable & Co. Ltd.)

Invasion from the Air
Invasion from the Air by Roy Connolly Cover: Grayson and Grayson, 1934
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Grayson and
Grayson (c) 1934 Grayson and Grayson)

Reckoning, The
The Reckoning by Joan Conquest Cover: Macauley Co., 1931 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Macauley Co. (c) 1931
Macauley Co.)

Inheritors, The
The Inheritors by Joseph Conrad & Ford M. Itueffer Cover: McClure,
Philips & Co., 1901 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Rahne
Rahne by Susan Coon Cover: Avon Books, 1980 (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) 1980 Avon Books)

Jesus Factor, The
The Jesus Factor by Edwin Corley Cover: Coronet Communications, 1971
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Paperback
Library (c) 1971 Paperback Library Edition Coronet)

Sword of Lankor, The
The Sword of Lankor by Howard L. Cory Cover: Ace Books, 1966 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1966 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Revi-Lona
Revi-Lona by Frank Cowan Title Page: Arno Press, 1978 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Out of the Silence
Out of the Silence by Erle Cox Cover: Rae D. Henkle Co., Inc., 1928
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Rae D. Henkle Co., Inc. (c) 1928 Rae D. Henkle Co., Inc.)

Ionia
Ionia by Alexander Craig Cover: E.A. Weeks Co., 1898 (First Edition)
illustration by J.C. Levendecker (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. )

Salathiel the Wandering Jew
Salathiel the Wandering Jew by George Croly Cover: Funk & Wagnalls Co.,
1900 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Year of Consent
Year of Consent by Kendell Foster Crossen Cover: Dell, 1954 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1954 Dell Books)

Strange Adventures of Mr. Middleton, The
The Strange Adventures of Mr. Middleton by Wardon Curtis Cover: Herbert
S. Stone & Co., 1903 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Yngling, The
The Yngling by John Dalmas Cover: Pyramid Books, 1971 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 Pyramid
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Inferno
Illustration from Dante Alighieri's Inferno (1861). Engraved by Gustav
Dore. (M. M. Kavanagh. )

Man of Double Deed, A
A Man of Double Deed by Leonard Daventry Cover: Doubleday, 1965 (First
Edition) illustration by Al Nagy (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1965 Doubleday)

Howling Mad
Howling Mad by Peter David Cover: Ace Books, 1989 illustration by Hiro
Kimura (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Karma Machine, The
The Karma Machine by Michael Davidson Cover: Popular Library, 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1975 Popular Library, Inc.)

Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder, A
A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder by James De Mille Cover:
HarperCollins/Harper & Bros., 1888 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

In the Face of My Enemy
In the Face of My Enemy by Joseph Delaney Cover: Baen Books, 1985
illustration by Kevin Johnson (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING
ENTERPRISES. (c) 1985 Baen Books)

Shapes
Shapes by Richard Delap & Walt Lee Cover: Charter Books, 1987 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Charter Books (c)
1987 Charter Books)

Lovely Monster, A
A Lovely Monster by Rick DeMarinis Cover: Dell, 1977 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977
Dell Books)

World in Eclipse
World in Eclipse by William Dexter Cover: Paperback Library, 1966 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Paperback Library
(c) 1966 Paperback Library)

War World
War World by William C. Dietz Cover: Ace Books, 1986 illustration by Miro
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1986 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Mind One
Mind One by Mike Dolinsky Cover: Dell, 1972 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1972 Dell
Books)

Radium Terrors, The
The Radium Terrors by Albert Dorrington Cover: Doubleday, Page & Co.,
1912 illustration by A.C. Michael (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1912 Doubleday, Page &
Co.)

Two Boys' Trip to an Unknown Planet
Two Boys' Trip to an Unknown Planet by Francis Doughty Cover: Charles
Bragin, 1901 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

They Went
They Went by Norman Douglas Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1926 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Dodd, Mead & Co.
(c) 1926 Dodd, Mead & Co.)

Pharaoh's Broker
Pharaoh's Broker by Ellsworth Douglass Cover: C. Arthur Pearson Ltd.,
1899 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Man from Mars, The
The Man from Mars by Henry Wallace Dowding Cover: Cochrane Publishing Co.
, 1990 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Cochrane Publishing Company (c) 1990 Cochrane Publishing
Company )

Solution T-25
Solution T-25 by Theodora Du Bois Cover: Doubleday, 1951 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1951 Doubleday Science Fiction)

Trilby
Trilby by George Du Maurier Cover: Popular Library, 1963 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of
Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1963 Popular Library, Inc.)

Gor Saga
Gor Saga by Maureen Duffy Cover: Eyre Methuen, 1981 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1981
Eyre Methuen)

Last Adam, The
The Last Adam by Ronald Duncan Cover: Dennis Dobson Ltd., 1952 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Dennis Dobson Limited (c) 1952 Dennis Dobson Limited)

Last Revolution, The
The Last Revolution by Lord Dunsany Cover: Jarrolds Ltd., 1951 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Jarrolds Publishers
Ltd. (c) 1951 Jarrolds Ltd. London)

Swimmers Beneath the Night
Swimmers Beneath the Night by M. Coleman Easton Cover: Popular Library,
1987 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1987 Popular Library)

HAB Theory, The
The HAB Theory by Allan W. Eckert Cover: Popular Library, 1977 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1977 Popular Library)

SF Book of Lists, The
The SF Book of Lists by Malcolm Edwards Cover: Berkley, 1983 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1983 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Terminus
Terminus by Peter Edwards Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1976 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1976 St.
Martin's Press)

What Entropy Means to Me
What Entropy Means to Me by George Alec Effinger Cover: Doubleday, 1972
(First Edition) illustration by Dickran Palulian (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1972 Doubleday)

Zalma
Zalma by T. Mullett Ellis Cover: Ash Partners Ltd., 1897 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Smoky God, The
The Smoky God by Willis George Emerson Cover: Forbes & Co., 1908
illustration by John A. Williams (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. )

World Aflame, The
The World Aflame by Leonard Engel Cover: The Dial Press, 1947 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1947 The Dial Press)

Woman Alive
Woman Alive by Susan Ertz Cover: D. Appleton-Century, 1936 illustration
by Bip Pares (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. D. Appleton-Century Company (c) 1936 D. Appleton-Century
Company Inc.)

Watchers of Space, The
The Watchers of Space by Nancy Etchemendy Cover: Avon Books, 1980 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1980 Avon Books)

Ninya
Ninya by H.A. Fagan Cover: Jonathan Cape, 1956 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century House
UK Limited. (c) 1956 Johnathan Cape London)

Groundties
Groundties by Jane S. Fancher Cover: Warner Books, 1991 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of
Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1991 Warner Books, Inc.)

Hartmann the Anarchist
Hartmann the Anarchist by E. Douglas Fawcett Cover: Edward Arnold, 1893
illustration by Fred T. Jane (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

World Next Door, The
The World Next Door by Brad Ferguson Cover: Tom Doherty Associates, 1990
illustration by David Mattingly (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1990 Tor
Books)

Through the Earth
Through the Earth by Clement Fezandie Cover: Century Co., 1898 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
Century House UK Limited. )

Messengers Will Come No More, The
The Messengers Will Come No More by Leslie Fiedler Cover: Stein and Day,
1974 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Stein
and Day (c) 1974 Stein and Day)

Molly Dear
Molly Dear by Stephen Fine Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1988 illustration
by Robert Bull Design (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Cover: Robert Bull Design. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c)
1988 St. Martin's Press)

Time Marches Sideways
Time Marches Sideways by Ralph L. Finn Cover: Hutchinson & Co. Ltd., 1949
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1949 Hutchinson & Co.)

Terror Strikes
Terror Strikes by N. Wesley Firth Cover: Hamilton & Co. Ltd., 1948 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1948 Hamilton & Co.)

Let Out the Beast
Let Out the Beast by Leonard Fischer Cover: New Stand Library, 1950
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. New Stand
Library. (c) 1950 New Stand Library)

Meda: A Tale of the Future
Meda: A Tale of the Future by Kenneth Folingsby Cover: Stationers' Hall,
1891 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Peacemaker, The
The Peacemaker by C.S. Forester Cover: Little, Brown & Co., 1934 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Published by
Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c) 1934 Little, Brown and Company
(Inc.))

Shepherd, The
The Shepherd by Frederick Forsyth Cover: Bantam, 1976 illustration by Lou
Feck (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used
by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1976 Bantam Books)

Lost Garden, The
The Lost Garden by George C. Foster Cover: Chapman & Hall, 1930 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1930 Chapman &
Hall)

Revolt of Angels, The
The Revolt of Angels by Anatole France Cover: Calmann-Levy, 1986 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1986 Calmann-
Levy)

Mind Net, The
The Mind Net by Frank Herbert Cover: DAW Books, 1974 illustration by
Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1974 DAW Books, Inc.)

Return of the Time Machine, The
The Return of the Time Machine by Egon Friedell Cover: DAW Books, 1972
illustration by Karel Thole (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1972
DAW Books, Inc.)

By Rocket to the Moon
By Rocket to the Moon by Otto Gail Cover: Sears Publishing Co., 1931
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1931
Sears Publishing Co.)

Last Rose of Summer, The
The Last Rose of Summer by Stephen Gallagher Cover: CORGI
Books/Transworld Publishers, 1978 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1966 Corgi Books, Transworld Publishers)

Not in Solitude
Not in Solitude by Kenneth Gantz Cover: Doubleday, 1959 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1959 Doubleday)

Skylark of Space, The
The Skylark of Space by E.E. Smith, Ph.D., & Mrs. Lee Hawkins Garby
Cover: Hadley Publishing Co., 1947 illustration by O.G. Estes (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1947 Hadley
Publishing Company)

Lady into Fox and a Man in the Zoo
Lady into Fox and a Man in the Zoo by David Garnett Cover: Garden City
Publishing Co., 1924 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1924 Garden City Publishing Co., Inc.)

Mirror in the Sky
Mirror in the Sky by Dav Garnett (David S. Garnett) Cover:
Berkley/Berkley Medallion, 1969 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1969 Berkley Medallion. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Twilight of the Gods, The
The Twilight of the Gods by Richard Garnett Cover: John Lane, 1911 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Warriors of Spider, The
The Warriors of Spider by W. Michael Gear Cover: Donald A. Wollheim, 1988
(First Edition) illustration by San Julian (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1988 Donald A. Wollheim)

Red Napoleon, The
The Red Napoleon by Floyd Gibbons Cover: Jonathan Cape, 1929 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1929 Johnathan Cape
Harrison Smith)

Late Final
Late Final by Lewis Gibbs Cover: Dent, 1951 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1951 Dent)

Space Hawk
Space Hawk by Anthony Gilmore Cover: Greenberg, 1952 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1952
Greenberg)

Watch the Northwind Rise
Watch the Northwind Rise by Robert Graves Cover: Avon Books, 1969
illustration by Bob Boster (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of
Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon Books)

Runts of 61 Cygni G
Runts of 61 Cygni G by James Grazier Cover: Belmont, 1970 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Belmont
Books (c) 1970 Belmont Books)

God Game, The
The God Game by Andrew Greeley Cover: Warner Books, 1986 (First Edition)
illustration by Boris Vallejo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1986
Warner Books, Inc.)

Time Beyond Time
Time Beyond Time by I.G. Green Cover: Belmont, 1971 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1971
Belmont Books)

Wandor's Ride
Wandor's Ride by Roland Green Cover: Avon Books, 1973 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1973 Avon Books)

Warrior Within, The
The Warrior Within by Sharon Green Cover: Donald A. Wollheim, 1982 (First
Edition) illustration by Ken Kelly (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1982 Donald A. Wollheim)

Time and Timothy Grenville
Time and Timothy Grenville by Terry Greenhough Cover: New English
Library, 1975 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c)
1975 New English Library)

Green Isle of the Great Deep, The
The Green Isle of the Great Deep by Neil Gunn Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd.
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1944 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Starwolves, The
The Starwolves by Thorarinn Gunnarsson Cover: Warner Books, 1988 (First
Edition) illustration by John Harris (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc.
(c) 1988 Warner Books, Inc.)

King Solomon's Mines
King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard Cover: Cassell & Co., 1885
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Man's World
Man's World by Charlotte Haldrane Cover: Geo. H. Doran Co., 1927 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1927 Geo H.
Doran Co.)

Man with Two Memories, The
The Man with Two Memories by J.B.S. Haldane Cover: Merlin, 1976 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1976 Merlin Press Inc.)

Pretender
Pretender by Piers Anthony & Frances Hall Cover: Borgo Press, 1979
illustration by Larry Ortiz (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1979 Borgo Press)

Impromptu in Moribundia
Impromptu in Moribundia by Patrick Hamilton Cover: Constable and Co. Ltd.
, 1939 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Constable & Co., London. (c) 1939 Constable and Co. Ltd.)

What Farrar Saw
What Farrar Saw by James Hanley Cover: Nicholson & Watson, 1946 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1946 Nicholson
& Watson)

Thuka of the Moon
Thuka of the Moon by Charles Hannan Cover: Digby, Long & Co., 1906 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

War Games
War Games by Karl Hensen Cover: Playboy Press Paperbacks, 1981
illustration by PEI Books, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1981 Playboy Press. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Land of the Changing Sun, The
The Land of the Changing Sun by Will N. Harben Cover: Merrian Co., 1894
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Outrider, The
The Outrider by Richard Harding Cover: Pinnacle Books, 1984 illustration
by Michael Meritet (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1984 Pinnacle Books)

Imitation Man, The
The Imitation Man by John Hargrave Cover: Big Ben Books, 1940 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1940 Big Ben
Books)

Symmetrians, The
The Symmetrians by Kenneth Harker Cover: Compact Books, 1966 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Lifetime Books. (c) 1966 Compact Books)

Gypsy Earth
Gypsy Earth by George Harper Cover: Doubleday, 1982 (First Edition)
illustration by Bruce Schluter (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1982 Doubleday & Co.)

Pantopia
Pantopia by Frank Harris Cover: The Panurge Press, 1930 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1930 The Panurge Press)

Romance in Radium, A
A Romance in Radium by J. Henry Harris Cover: Greening & Co. Ltd., 1906
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Warhaven
Warhaven by M. Elayn Harvey Cover: Franklin Watts, 1987 illustration by
Carl Lundgren (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1987 Franklin Watts)

Mind Brothers, The
The Mind Brothers by Peter Heath Cover: Lancer Books, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1967 Lancer
Books)

Tenebrae
Tenebrae by Ernest Henham Cover: Skeffington & Son, 1898 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Sidney's Comet
Sidney's Comet by Brian Herbert Cover: Berkley, 1983 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1983 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Magister Ludi (The Glass Bead Game)
Magister Ludi (The Glass Bead Game) by Hermann Hesse Cover: Bantam, 1970
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1970 Bantam Books)

Galactic Warlord
Galactic Warlord by Douglas Hill Cover: Laurel-Leaf Books, 1987 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1987
Laurel-Leaf Books)

New Earth and a New Heaven, A
A New Earth and a New Heaven by William Boyle Hill Cover: Watts & Co.,
1936 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1936 Watts & Co.)

Liege-Killer
Liege-Killer by Christopher Hinz Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1987 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of St.
Martin's Press. (c) 1987 St. Martin's Press)

Toddle Island
Toddle Island by James Dennis Hird Cover: Richard Bentley & Son, 1894
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Termush
Termush by Sven Holm Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Faber and Faber
Ltd. (c) 1969 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Hunters, The
The Hunters by Thomas Hoobler Cover: Playboy Press Paperbacks, 1978
illustration by V. Segrelles (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1978 Playboy Press. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

By Aeroplane to the Sun
By Aeroplane to the Sun by Donald W. Horner Cover: Century Press, 1910
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random Century House UK Limited. )

This Was Ivor Trent
This Was Ivor Trent by Claude Houghton Cover: Doubleday, Doran, & Co.,
Inc., 1935 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1935 Doubleday, Doran & Co., Inc.)

Philip Dru, Administrator
Philip Dru, Administrator by Edward Mandell House Cover: BW Huesch, 1912
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

John of Jingalo
John of Jingalo by Laurence Housman Cover: Henry Holt & Co., 1912 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Intrigue on the Upper Level
Intrigue on the Upper Level by Thomas Hoyne Cover: Reilly & Lee Co., 1934
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1934
Reilly & Lee Co.)

Green Mansions
Green Mansions by W.H. Hudson Cover: Airmont Publishing, 1965 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Airmont Publishing Co., Inc. - Airmont Books (c) 1965 Airmont Publishing
Company )

Valley of Terror
Valley of Terror by Russell Rey (Dennis Hughes) Cover: Curtis Warren Ltd.
, 1953 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1953 Curtis Warren Ltd.)

Not in Our Stars
Not in Our Stars by Edward Hyams Cover: Longmans, Green & Co., 1949
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1949
Longmans, Green & Co.)

Lottery, The
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson Cover: Popular Library, 1949 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1949 Popular Library, Inc.)

Starship Orpheus I
Starship Orpheus I by Symon Jade Cover: Pinnacle Books, 1982 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1982 Pinnacle
Books)

Tower to the Sky
Tower to the Sky by Phillip Jennings Cover: Baen Books, 1988 illustration
by Stephen Hickman (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1988 Baen Books)

Long Journey, The
The Long Journey by Johannes Jensen Cover: Makinlay, Stone & Mackenzie,
1923 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1923 Makinlay, Stone & Mackenzie)

Logan's Run
Logan's Run by George Clayton Johnson & William F. Nolan Cover: Dell,
1969 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used
by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1969 Dell Books)

On the Last Day
On the Last Day by Mervyn Jones Cover: Jonathan Cape, 1958 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1958 Johnathan Cape
London)

Ten from Infinity
Ten from Infinity by Ivar Jorgenson Cover: Monarch Books, 1963
illustration by Ralph Brillhart (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1963 Monarch Books Inc.)

On the Marble Cliffs
On the Marble Cliffs by Ernst Juenger Cover: New Directions, 1947 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1947 New
Directions)

HEROD Men, The
The HEROD Men by Nick Kamin Cover: Ace Books, 1971 illustration by John
Schoenkerr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1971 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

People of the Twilight
People of the Twilight by H. Kaner Cover: Kaner Publishing Co. Unlimited,
1946 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1946 Kaner Publishing Company)

If the South Had Won the Civil War
If the South Had Won the Civil War by MacKinlay Kantor Cover: Bantam,
1961 illustration by Lisa Barnett (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1961 Bantam Books)

Incredible Umbrella, The
The Incredible Umbrella by Marvin Kaye Cover: Doubleday, 1979
illustration by Cathy Canzani (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979 Doubleday)

Tunnel, The
The Tunnel by Bernhard Kellermann Cover: Macauley Company, 1915 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Passenger
Passenger by Thomas Keneally Cover: HarperCollins/Collins, 1979 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1979
Collins)

Triuneverse, The
The Triuneverse by R.A. Kennedy Cover: Chas. Knight & Co., Ltd., 1912,
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Out of the Silent Places
Out of the Silent Places by Brad Kent (Maurice G. Hugi) Cover: Curtis
Warren, 1952 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1952 Curtis Books)

Summervale
Summervale by James Kenward Cover: Constable and Company Ltd., 1933
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Constable & Co. , London. (c) 1933 Constable and
Company Ltd.)

Kepler's Somnium
Kepler's Somnium by Johannes Kepler Cover: U. Wisconsin Press, 1967
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1967 U.
Wisconsin Press)

Retread Shop
Retread Shop by T. Jackson King Cover: Popular Library, 1988 illustration
by Tom Kidd (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1988 Popular Library)

New Dominion, The
The New Dominion by Arthur Wellesley Kipling Cover: Francis Griffiths,
1908 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

With the Night Mail
With the Night Mail by Rudyard Kipling Cover: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1909
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1909 Doubleday, Page & Co.)

Unrest of their Time
Unrest of their Time by Nellie Kirkham Cover: Cresset Press, 1935 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1935 Cresset Press Ltd.)

Seventh Day, The
The Seventh Day by Hans Hellmut Kirst Cover: Doubleday, 1959 illustration
by Richard Powers (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1959 Doubleday)

Starmaster's Gambit
Starmaster's Gambit by Gerard Klein Cover: DAW Books, 1973 illustration
by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1973 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Jim McWhirter
Jim McWhirter by W.P. Knowles Cover: C.W. Daniel Co., 1933 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1933 C.W. Daniel Company)

Memories of the Future
Memories of the Future by Ronald A. Knox Cover: George H. Doran Co., 1923
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1923 George H. Doran Company)

Last Thing You'd Want to Know, The
The Last Thing You'd Want to Know by Eric Koch Cover: Tundra Books, 1976
illustration by Molly Pulver (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1976 Tundra Books)

Jehovah Contract, The
The Jehovah Contract by Victor Koman Cover: Avon Books, 1984 illustration
by Gary Ruddell (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1984 Avon Books)

Supernova
Supernova by Eric Kotani & Roger MacBride Allen Cover: Avon Books, 1991
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1991 Avon Books)

Space Mavericks, The
The Space Mavericks by Michael K. Kring Cover: Leisure Books, 1980 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1980 Leisure
Books)

Pandora's Genes
Pandora's Genes by Kathryn Lance Cover: Popular Library, 1985
illustration by David Mattingly (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c)
1985 Popular Library)

Sword for the Empire
Sword for the Empire by Gene Lancour Cover: Doubleday, 1978 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1978 Doubleday & Co.)

World Called Camelot, A
A World Called Camelot by Arthur Landis Cover: DAW Books, 1976
illustration by Thomas Barber, Jr. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc.
(c) 1976 DAW Books, Inc.)

Two Planets
Two Planets by Kird Lasswitz Cover: Southern Illinois University Press,
1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1971 Southern Illinois University Press.)

Mudd's Angels
Mudd's Angels by J.A. Lawrence Cover: Bantam, 1978 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1978
Bantam Books)

Time & Space
Time & Space by Rand Le Page Cover: Curtis Warren, 1952 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1952
Curtis Warren Ltd.)

Iron Man and the Tin Woman, The
The Iron Man and the Tin Woman by Stephen Leacock Cover: Tonbridge
Printers, 1929 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1929 Tonbridge Printers)

Mountains of the Sun, The
The Mountains of the Sun by Christian Leourier Cover: Berkley, 1974
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1974 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Time Machine, Special Edition: World War II Codebreaker
Time Machine, Special Edition: World War II Codebreaker by Peter Lerangis
Cover: Bantam, 1989 illustration by Steve Fastner (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1989
Bantam Books)

Insect Warriors, The
The Insect Warriors by Rex Dean Levie Cover: Ace Books, 1965 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1965 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Gods of Foxcroft, The
The Gods of Foxcroft by David Levy Cover: Arbor House, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1970 Arbor House)

Unexpected Island, The
The Unexpected Island by Lin Yutang Cover: The Windmill Press, 1955
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1955
The Windmill Press, Surrey England )

Nothing Ever Happens
Nothing Ever Happens by Maurice Lincoln Cover: John Hamilton Ltd., 1927
illustration by Tom Cotnzell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers
Limited. (c) 1927 John Hamilton Ltd.)

Golden Book of Springfield, The
The Golden Book of Springfield by Vachel Lindsay Cover: Macmillan, 1920
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Identity Seven
Identity Seven by Robert Lory Cover: DAW Books, 1974 illustration by
Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1974 DAW Books, Inc.)

Operation Orbit
Operation Orbit by Kris Luna Cover: Curtis Warren, 1953 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Curtis Books)

Message from Mars, A
A Message from Mars by Lester Lurgan Cover: Greening & Co., 1912 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Greening & Co. )

Mad Scientist, The
The Mad Scientist by Raymond McDonald Cover: Cochrane Publishing, 1908
illustration by Charles Beecher Bunnell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cochrane Publishing Co. )

Great God Pan and The Inmost Light, The
The Great God Pan and The Inmost Light by Arthur Machen Cover: Robert
Bros., 1894 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
)

Vanishing Professor, The
The Vanishing Professor by Fred MacIsaac Cover: Henry Waterson Co., 1927
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1927
Henry Waterson Co.)

Yellow Wave, The
The Yellow Wave by Kenneth MacKay Cover: Richard Bentley & Son, 1895
illustration by Frank P. Mahoney (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. )

Panchronicon, The
The Panchronicon by Harold Steele Mackaye Cover: Charles Scribner's Sons,
1904 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Lunatic Republic, The
The Lunatic Republic by Compton Mackenzie Cover: Chatto & Windous, 1959
illustration by Clark Hutton (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1959
Chatto & Windous)

Tragedy of Man, The
The Tragedy of Man by Imre Madach Cover: Corvina Press, 1963 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1963 Corvina
Press)

God's Grace
God's Grace by Bernard Malamud Cover: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1982
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Jacket design: Honi Werner. Reprinted by permission of Farrar,
Straus & Giroux, Inc. (c) 1982 Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. Design
(c)1982 Honi Werner)

Unknown Shore, The
The Unknown Shore by Donald Malcolm Cover: Laser Books, 1976 illustration
by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1976 Laser Books)

They
They by Marya Mannes Cover: Modern Library Editions, 1968 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Modern Library
Editions (c) 1968 Modern Library Editions)

When the Earth Died
When the Earth Died by Karl Mannheim Cover: Sydney Remberton, 1950 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Sydney Pemberton
(c) 1950 Sydney Pemberton)

Marahuna
Marahuna by H.B. Marriott-Watson Cover: Longmans, Green & Co., 1888
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Longmens, Green & Co. )

Upsidonia
Upsidonia by Archibald Marshall Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1917 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Dodd, Mead & Co. )

Ogden's Strange Story
Ogden's Strange Story by Edison Marshall Cover: H.C. Kinsey & Co., 1934
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1934 H.C. Kinsey & Company)

Summer in 3,000
Summer in 3,000 by Peter Martin Cover: Quality Press, 1946 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1946 Quality Press UK)

Stones of Enchantment
Stones of Enchantment by Windham Martyn Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd., 1948
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Random House UK Limited. (c) 1948 Herbert Jenkins
Ltd.)

Kavin's World
Kavin's World by David Mason Cover: Lancer Books, 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1969 Lancer Books)

Stolen Planet, The
The Stolen Planet by John Mastin Cover: Philip Wellby, 1906 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Scars, and Other Distinguishing Marks
Scars, and Other Distinguishing Marks by Richard Chrisitan Matheson
Cover: Scream/Press, 1987 illustration by Mya Kramer & Jeff Conner (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1987
Scream/Press)

Not in Our Stars
Not in Our Stars by Michael Maurice (Conrad Arthur Skinner) Cover: J.B.
Lippincott, 1923 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1923 J.B. Lippincott)

Next Chapter, The
The Next Chapter by Andre Maurois Cover: Kegan Paul, 1927 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1927 Kegan
Paul London)

Path of Exoterra, The
The Path of Exoterra by Gordon McBain Cover: Avon Books, 1981 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1981 Avon Books)

Screaming Dead Balloons, The
The Screaming Dead Balloons by Philip McCutchan Cover: Berkley, 1969
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1969 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Janus Syndrome, The
The Janus Syndrome by Steven E. McDonald Cover: Bantam, 1981 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1981 Bantam Books)

Scorpio
Scorpio by Alex McDonough Cover: Ace Books, 1990 illustration by John
Jude Palencar (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Shattered Stars, The
The Shattered Stars by Richard S. McEnroe Cover: Bantam, 1984 illustation
by John Berkey (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1984 Bantam Books)

Ghoster
Ghoster by Lee McKeone Cover: Popular Library, 1988 illustrated by James
Warhola (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1988 Popular Library)

Helix and the Sword, The
The Helix and the Sword by John McLoughlin Cover: TOR/Tom Doherty
Associates, 1983 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1983 Tor Books)

Pilgrimage
Pilgrimage by Drew Mendelson Cover: DAW Books, 1981 illustration by John
Pound (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1981 DAW Books, Inc.)

Great Awakening, The
The Great Awakening by Albert Adams Merrill Cover: George Book, 1899
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

House of Many Worlds, The
The House of Many Worlds by Sam J. Merwin Cover: Doubleday, 1951 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1951 Doubleday)

Skirmish
Skirmish by Melisa Michaels Cover: TOR/Tom Doherty Associates, 1985
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1985 Tor Books)

Winter World
Winter World by C.J. Mills Cover: Ace Books, 1992 illustration by Jean
Targete (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1992 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Star Quest
Star Quest by Robert E. Mills Cover: Belmont Tower Books, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1978 Belmont
Tower Books)

Into the Sun and Other Stories
Into the Sun and Other Stories by Robert Duncan Milne Cover: Donald M.
Grant, 1980 (First Edition) illustration by Ned Dameron (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used with permission of
Donald M. Grant. (c) 1980 Donald M. Grant)

Three Go Back
Three Go Back by J. Leslie Mitchell Cover: Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1978
illustration by Bill Tinker (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Bobbs-Merrill Co. (c) 1932 Bobbs - Merrill Co.)

Last American, The
The Last American by John A. Mitchell Cover: Frederick A. Stokes &
Brother, 1889 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Procurator
Procurator by Kirk Mitchell Cover: Ace Books, 1984 illustration by James
Gurney (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1984 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Sleeping Bomb, The
The Sleeping Bomb by James Moffatt Cover: New English Library, 1970
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1970 New English Library)

Time Before This, The
The Time Before This by Nicholas Monsarrat Cover: William Sloane
Associates, 1962 illustration by Walter Ferro (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. William Sloane Associate (c) 1962
William Sloane Associate)

Wonderful Electric Elephant, The
The Wonderful Electric Elephant by Frances Trego Montgomery Cover: The
Saalfield Publishing Co., 1904 illustration by C.M. Coolidge (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Slater's Planet
Slater's Planet by Harris Moore Cover: Pinnacle Books, 1971 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Pinnacle Books (c)
1971 Pinnacle Books)

Heart Clock
Heart Clock by Dick Morland Cover: New English Library, 1974 illustration
by Keef (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1974 New English
Library)

Gumption Island
Gumption Island by Felix Morley Cover; Caxton Printers Ltd., 1956 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. By permission of
the publisher, The Caxton Printers, Ltd., Caldwell, Idaho. (c) 1956 Caxton
Printers Ltd.)

Sheriff of Purgatory, The
The Sheriff of Purgatory by Jim Morris Cover: TOR, 1987 illustration by
Royo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1987 Tor Books)

No Man on Earth
No Man on Earth by Walter Moudy Cover: Berkley, 1964 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1964 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Tangled Webs
Tangled Webs by Steve Mudd Cover: Popular Library, 1989 illustration by
Blas Gallego (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1989 Popular
Library)

Kinsmen of the Dragon
Kinsmen of the Dragon by Stanley Mullen Cover: Shasta, 1951 (First
Edition) illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Erle Melvin Korshak. (c) 1951
Shasta)

Vendetta
Vendetta by M.S. Murdock Cover: Popular Library, 1987 illustration by Tim
Hildebrandt (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Popular (c) 1987 Popular Library)

Gobi or Shamo
Gobi or Shamo by Gilbert Murray Cover: Longmans, Green & Co., 1889 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Portrait of Jennie
Portrait of Jennie by Robert Nathan Cover: Popular Library, 1962
illustration by Zackerberg (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1962 Popular Library, Inc.)

Sinister Researches of C.P. Ransom, The
The Sinister Researches of C.P. Ransom by Homer Nearing Cover: Doubleday,
1954 (First Edition) illustration by Edward Gorey (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1954
Doubleday)

Place Beyond Man, A
A Place Beyond Man by Cary Neeper Cover: Dell, 1977 illustration by Boris
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1977 Dell Books)

His Wisdom, the Defender
His Wisdom, the Defender by Simon Newcomb Cover: HarperCollins/Harper &
Bros., 1900 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Night Mayor, The
The Night Mayor by Kim Newman Cover: Carroll & Graf, 1990 (First US
Edition) illustration by Ray Colmer (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of Tony Greco & Associates, Inc. (c) 1990 Carroll & Graf)

Timelapse
Timelapse by David F. Nighbert Cover: St. Martin's Press (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
St. Martin's Press. (c) 1990 St. Martin's Press)

Great Secret, The
The Great Secret by Hume Nisbet Cover: F.V. White & Co., 1895 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

I Killed Stalin
I Killed Stalin by Sterling Noel Cover: Eton Books, 1952 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Eton Books (c) 1952 Eton
Books)

Ultimate Solution, The
The Ultimate Solution by Eric Norden Cover: Warner Books, 1973
illustration by Seymour Chwast (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1973
Warner Books)

Under-People, The
The Under-People by Eric Norman Cover: Award Books, 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Award Books (c) 1969 Award
Books)

Untamed, The
The Untamed by Victor Norwood Cover: Scion, 1951 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1951 Scion, Ltd.)

Last Man, The
The Last Man by Alfred Noyes Cover: John Murray, 1940 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. John Murray
(c) 1940 John Murray UK)

Pallid Giant, The
The Pallid Giant by Pierrepont Noyes Cover: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1927
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1927 Fleming H. Revell Company)

Lovers: 2075
Lovers: 2075 by Charles English (Charles Nuetzel) Cover: N.A.C.
Publications, 1964 illustration by Gus Albert (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. N.A.C. Publications (c) 1964
N.A.C. Publications)

Third Policeman, The
The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien Cover: Lanser Books, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lancer Books (c)
1967 Lancer Books)

Plutonia
Plutonia by Vladimir A. Obruchev Cover: Foreign Languages Publishing
House, 1960 illustration by G. Nikolsky (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Foreign Languages Publishing House (c) 1960
Foreign Lnaguages Publishing House )

Last War, The
The Last War by Samuel W. Odell Cover: Charles H. Kerr, 1898 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

On the Eighth Day
On the Eighth Day by Lawrence Okun Cover: Playboy Press Paperbacks, 1980
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1980 Playboy Press. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

North Sea Bubble, The
The North Sea Bubble by Ernest Oldmeadow Cover: E. Grant Richards, 1906
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Mystery of Evelin Delorme, The
The Mystery of Evelin Delorme by Albert B. Paine Cover: Arena, 1894
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

This Time Tomorrow
This T ime Tomorrow by Lauren Paine Cover: World Distributors, 1963
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. World
Distributors (c) 1963 World Distributors)

Watcher, The
The Watcher by Jane Palmer Cover: Women's Press, 1986 illustration by
Fiona Macvicar (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of The Women's Press, London. (c) 1986 The Women's
Press)

Scarlet Empire, The
The Scarlet Empire by David Perry Cover: Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1906 (First
Edition) illustration by Hermann C. Wall (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Titus Groan
Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake Cover: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1946 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reynal & Hitchcock (c) 1946 Reynal & Hitchcock)

Iron Pirate, The
The Iron Pirate by Max Pemberton Cover: Rand, McNally, 1897 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Man Who Never Missed, The
The Man Who Never Missed by Steve Perry Cover: Ace Books, 1985
illustration by James Gurney (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1985 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Revolt of the Horses
Revolt of the Horses by Walter Copland Perry Cover: Grant Richards, 1898
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

King of Argent
King of Argent by John T. Phillifent Cover: Donald A. Wollheim, 1973
(First Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Donald A. Wollneim (c) 1973 Donald
A. Wollheim)

Tachyon Web, The
The Tachyon Web by Christopher Pike Cover: Bantam, 1986 (First Edition)
illustration by Kevin Johnson (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1986 Bantam Spectra)

Lizard Music
Lizard Music by Daniel Pinkwater Cover: Dodd, Mead, 1976 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Dodd, Mead
(c) 1976 Dodd, Mead & Co.)

Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, The
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym by Edgar Allan Poe Cover: Limited
Editions, 1930 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1930 Limited Editions)

Up and Out
Up and Out by John Cowper Powys Cover: MacDonald, 1957 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.MacDonald
(c) 1957 MacDonald)

Shiloh Project, The
The Shiloh Project by David C. Poyer Cover: Avon Books, 1981 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside.
Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1981 Avon Books)

Green Man of Kilsona, The
The Green Man of Kilsona by Festus Pragnell Cover: Phillip Allan (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Philip Allan (c) 19 Philip Allan)

Guts
Guts by Byron Preiss & C.J. Henderson Cover: Tempo Books, 1979 (First
Edition) illustration by Gray Morrow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Tempo Books (c) 1979 Tempo Books)

Strange Gateways
Strange Gateways by E. Hoffman Price Cover: Arkham House, 1967 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Arkham House Publishers. (c) 1967 by Arkham House Publishers,
Inc.)

Return of the Ceteosaurus, The
The Return of the Ceteosaurus by Garnett Radcliffe Cover: Drane (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Drane. )

Remember the Alamo!
Remember the Alamo! by Kevin D. Randle & Robert Cornett Cover: Charter,
1980 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Charter Books (c) 1980 Charter Books)

Jaguar
Jaguar by Bill Ransom Cover: Ace Books, 1990 (First Edition) illustration
by Royo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1990 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Maru Invasion, The
The Maru Invasion by Luan Ranzetta Cover: Brown, Watson Ltd., 1962 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Brown Watson Limited (c) 1962 Brown Watson Ltd.)

The Camp of the Saints, The
The Camp of the Saints by Jean Raspail Cover: Ace Books, 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1975 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Strange World of Planet X, The
The Strange World of Planet X by Rene Ray Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd.,
1957 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Random House UK Limited. (c) 1957 Herbert Jenkins
Ltd.)

Seedy, The
The Seedy by Robert Ray Cover: Panther Books, 1969 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1969 Panther Books)

Whispering Gorilla, The
The Whispering Gorilla by David V. Reed Cover: Sydney Pemberton, 1950
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Sydney Pemberton (c) 1950 Sydney Pemberton)

Yellow-Back Radio Broke-Down
Yellow-Back Radio Broke-Down by Ishmael Reed Cover: Avon Books, 1969
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon Books)

Savage Stars, The
The Savage Stars by Richard Reinsmith Cover: Tower, 1981 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Tower Books
(c) 1981 Tower Books)

Monodyne Catastrophe, The
The Monodyne Catastrophe by Joseph Renard Cover: Major Books, 1977 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Major Books (c) 1977 Major Books)

Voyage to Purilia, A
A Voyage to Purilia by Elmer Rice Cover: J.J. Little & Ives, 1930 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. J.
J. Little & Ives (c) 1930 J.J. Little & Ives)

Pindharee
Pindharee by Joel Richards Cover: TOR/Tom Doherty Associates, 1986 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1986 Tor Books)

Strayed Sheep of Charun, The
The Strayed Sheep of Charun by John Maddox Roberts Cover: Doubleday, 1977
(First Edition) illustration by Michael Flanagan (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977
Doubleday)

Report on the Status Quo
Report on the Status Quo by Terence Roberts Cover: Merlin Press Inc.,
1955 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Merlin
Press Inc. (c) 1955 Merlin Press Inc.)

Longhead
Longhead by Charles Henry Robinson Cover: L.C. Page & Co., 1913 (First
Edition) illustration by Charles Livingston Bull (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Mindfogger
Mindfogger by Michael Rogers Cover: Dell, 1976 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1976 Dell
Books)

Run to the Stars
Run to the Stars by Michael Scott Rohan Cover: Ace Books, 1986
illustration by John Berkey (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Mystery of Dr Fu-Manchu, The
The Mystery of Dr Fu-Manchu by Sax Rohmer Cover: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1985
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. J. M. Dent
& Sons (c) 1985 J.M. Dent & Sons)

Maniac's Dream, The
The Maniac's Dream by R. Horace Rose Cover: Duckworth, 1946 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Duckworth & Co. (c) 1946 Duckworth & Co.)

Man Who Lived Backwards, The
The Man Who Lived Backwards by Malcolm Ross Cover: Farrar, Straus &
Giroux/Farrar, Straus & Co., 1950 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Jacket design: Malcolm Ross.
Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. (c) 1950 Farrar,
Straus and Company. Design (c) 1950 Malcolm Ross.)

Staroamer's Fate
Staroamer's Fate by Chuck Rothman Cover: Popular Library, 1986
illustration by Enric (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1986 Popular
Library, Inc.)

Gods of Cerus Major, The
The Gods of Cerus Major by Gary Alan Ruse Cover: Doubleday, 1982
illustration by Soren Arutyunyan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1982 Doubleday)

Satan in the Suburbs
Satan in the Suburbs by Bertrand Russell Cover: Bodley Head, 1953 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited (c) 1953 Bodley Head Richard
Clay & Co.)

Inner Eclipse
Inner Eclipse by Richard Paul Russo Cover: TOR, 1988 illustration by
David Mattingly (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1988 Tor Books)

La Passion Selon Satan
La Passion Selon Satan by Jacques Sadoul Cover: Editions J'ai Lu, 1960
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Editions
J'ai Lu (c) 1960 Editions J'ai Lu)

Leaves of October, The
The Leaves of October by Don Sakers Cover: Baen Books, 1988 illustration
by Judith Mitchell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1988 Baen Books)

Throwbacks, The
The Throwbacks by Roger Sarac Cover: Belmont, 1965 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Belmont Books (c) 1965 Belmont
Books)

Way-Farer
Way-Farer by Dennis Schmidt Cover: Ace Books, 1978 illustration by Ben
Venuti (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1978 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Travels in the Interior
Travels in the Interior by Luke Courteney (Alfred Taylor Schofield)
Cover: Ward & Downey, 1887 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Palimpests
Palimpests by Carter Scholz & Glenn Harcourt Cover: Ace Books, 1984
illustration by Attila Hejja (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1984 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

We Are All Legends
We Are All Legends by Darrell Schweitzer Cover: Donning Co., 1981
illustration by Fabian (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Donning Company Starblaze Editions (c) 1981 Donning Company
Starblaze Editions)

Project Dracula
Project Dracula by Alan Scott Cover: Sphere Books Ltd., 1971 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Sphere Books Ltd.
(c) 1971 Sphere Books Ltd.)

Master of the Microbe, The
The Master of the Microbe by Robert W. Service Cover: Barse & Hopkins,
1926 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Barse
& Hopkins. (c) 1926 Barse & Hopkins)

TekWar
TekWar by William Shatner Cover: Ace Books, 1989 illustration by Boris
Vallejo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Quest for Simbilis, A
A Quest for Simbilis by Michael Shea Cover: DAW Books, 1974 illustration
by George Barr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1974 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Girl Who Knew Tomorrow, The
The Girl Who Knew Tomorrow by Zoa Sherburne Cover: William Morrow & Co.,
1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown
by permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1971 William Morrow & Co.,
Inc.)

Maxwell's Demon
Maxwell's Demon by Martin Sherwood Cover: New English Library, 1976
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1976 New English Library)

Man Who Lost Himself, The
The Man Who Lost Himself by Osbert Sitwell Cover: Duckworth, 1929 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Duckworth & Co. (c) 1929 Duckworth & Co.)

Ship of Destiny
Ship of Destiny by Henry J. Slater Cover: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1951
illustration by Nettie Weber (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Thomas V.Crowell Co. (c) 1951 Thomas Y. Crowell )

Indians Won, The
The Indians Won by Martin Cruz Smith Cover: Leisure Books, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Leisure Books (c)
1970 Leisure Books)

Very Large Array, A
A Very Large Array by Melinda M. Snodgrass Cover: U. of New Mexico Press,
1987 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. University of New Mexico Press. (c) 1987 University of New
Mexico Press.)

Hawks of Arcturus, The
The Hawks of Arcturus by Cecil Snyder III Cover: DAW Books, 1974 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1974 DAW Books, Inc.)

Testament XXI
Testament XXI by Guy Snyder Cover: DAW Books, 1973 illustration by Kelly
Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1973 DAW Books, Inc.)

Tomorrow's Comet
Tomorrow's Comet by Lewis Sowden Cover: Robert Hale Ltd., 1951 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1951 Robert
Hale Ltd.)

Sever the Earth
Sever the Earth by Jacques Spitz Cover: Bodley Head/John Lane, 1936
(First Edition) illustration by Denis Tegetmeier (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century House
UK Limited (c) 1936 John Lane London)

Village of Stars
Village of Stars by Paul Stanton Cover: William Morrow & Co./M.S. Mill
Co., 1960 illustration by Charles Gear (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of William Morrow & Co.,
Inc. (c) 1960 William Morrow & Co., Inc.)

Smith's Dream
Smith's Dream by C.K. Stead Cover: Longman Paul Ltd., 1986 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Longman Paul Ltd.
(c) 1986 Longman Paul Ltd.)

Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson Cover:
Longmans, Green & Co., 1886 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Tracker
Tracker by Ron Stillman Cover: Diamond Books, 1991 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Diamond Books (c) 1991 Diamond
Books)

Polaris and the Immortals
Polaris and the Immortals by Charles B. Stilson Cover: Avalon Books, 1968
illustration by Gray Morrow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Thomas Bouregy & Co. - Avalon Books (c)
1968 Avalon Books)

Last Fall
Last Fall by Bruce Stolbov Cover: Doubleday, 1987 (First Edition)
illustration by Margo Herr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1987 Doubleday)

King of the Air
King of the Air by Herbert Strang Cover: Humphrey Milford (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside Humphrey
Milford (UK). )

Promising Planet, A
A Promising Planet by Jeremy Strike Cover: Ace Books, 1970 illustration
by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Woman Who Couldn't Die, The
The Woman Who Couldn't Die by Arthur Stringer Cover: Bobbs-Merrill Co.,
1929 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1929 Bobbs - Meerrill Co.)

Hard to Be a God
Hard to Be a God by Arkady & Boris Strugatski Cover: Seabury Press, 1973
(First Edition) illustration by Alan Peckolick (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Seabury Press (c) 1973 Seabury
Press)

Star Raiders, The
The Star Raiders by Donald Suddaby Cover: Geoffrey Cumberlege, 1950
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Geoffrey Cumberlege (c) 1950 Geoffrey Cumberlege)

Riallaro
Riallaro by Godfrey Sweven Cover: G.P. Putnam's Sons (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
The Putnam Publishing Group. )

Portal
Portal by Rob Swigart Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1988 (First Edition)
illustration by Jean-Francois Podevin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cover: Jean Francois Podevin. Courtesy of St.
Martin's Press. (c) 1988 St. Martin's Press)

Mirror Friend, Mirror Foe
Mirror Friend, Mirror Foe by George Takei & Robert Asprin Cover: Playboy
Press, 1979 illustration by Ken Barr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1979 Playboy Press.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Greek, The
The Greek by Tiffany Thayer Cover: Albert & Charles Boni, 1931 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Albert & Charles
Boni (c) 1931 Albert & Charles Boni)

Teg's 1994
Teg's 1994 by Robert Theobald & J.M. Scott Cover: Swallow Press Inc.,
1972 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Swallow Press Inc. (c) 1972 Swallow Press Inc.)

Green Ray, The
The Green Ray by Vance Thompson Cover: Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1924 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1924 Bobbs -
Meerrill Co.)

Power of the Serpent, The
The Power of the Serpent by Peter Timlett Cover: Bantam, 1976 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1976 Bantam Books)

Giphantia
Giphantia by C.F. Tiphaigne de la Roche Cover: Robert Horsfield, 1761
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Robert
Horsfield )

Mind out of Time
Mind out of Time by Angela Tonks Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1958 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with the
permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1958 Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Immortal Error, The
The Immortal Error by Elleston Trevor Cover: Gerald Swan Ltd., 1946
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gerald Swan
Ltd. (c) 1946 Gerald Swan Ltd.)

Submarine Girl, The
The Submarine Girl by Edgar Turner Cover: Stanley Paul & Co., 1909 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Man Whose Name Wouldn't Fit, The
The Man Whose Name Wouldn't Fit by Theodore Tyler Cover: Doubleday & Co.,
1968 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used
by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1968 Doubleday & Co.)

Red Court, The
The Red Court by Rena Vale Cover: Nelson Publishing Co. (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Nelson
Publishing (c) 1952 Nelson Publishing Co.)

Sideslip
Sideslip by Dave Van Arnam & Ted White Cover: Pyramid Books, 1968 (First
Edition) illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 Pyramid Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Where Were You Last Pluterday?
Where Were You Last Pluterday? by Paul Van Herck Cover: DAW Books, 1973
illustration by Karel Thole (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1973
DAW Books, Inc.)

Planet of the Gawfs
Planet of the Gawfs by Steve Vance Cover: Leisure Books, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Leisure Books (c)
1978 Leisure Books)

Pleasure Planet
Pleasure Planet by Edward E. George (Robert Vardeman) Cover: Carlyle
Communications, 1974 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Carlyle Communications (c) 1974 Carlyle Communications)

Hellwalker
Hellwalker by Carolyn Vesser Cover: TOR, 1988 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1988 Tor Books)

My First Two Thousand Years
My First Two Thousand Years by George S. Viereck & Paul Eldridge Cover:
Macauley Co., 1928 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Macauley Co. (c) 1928 Macauley Co.)

Tomorrow's Eve
Tomorrow's Eve by Adam Villiers de L'Isle Cover: University of Illinois
Press, 1982 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
University of Illinois Press. (c) 1982 University of Illinois Press.)

Solarkill
Solarkill by Charles Ingrid (Rhondi Vilott) Cover: DAW Books, 1987 (First
Edition) illustration by Frank Morris (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc.
(c) 1987 DAW Books, Inc.)

StarSpawn
StarSpawn by Kenneth Von Gunden Cover: Ace Books, 1990 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1990 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Metropolis
Metropolis by Thea Von Harbou Cover: Uzeanische Bibiothek, 1984 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Uzeanische
Bibiothek (c) 1984 Uzeanische Bibiothek)

Pre-Empt
Pre-Empt by John R. Vorhies Cover: Avon Books, 1969 illustration by
Milton Charles (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon Books)

Lord's Pink Ocean, The
The Lord's Pink Ocean by David Walker Cover: DAW Books, 1972 (First
Edition) illustration by Josh Kirby (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc.
(c) 1972 DAW Books, Inc.)

War-Gamers' World
War-Gamers' World by Hugh Walker Cover: DAW Books, 1978 illustration by
Michael Mariano (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1978 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Light of Lilith, The
The Light of Lilith by F. McDonald Wallis Cover: Ace Books, 1961 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1961 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Vandals of the Void
Vandals of the Void by J.M. Walsh Cover: John Hamilton Ltd., 1931 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1931 John Hamilton
Ltd.)

Requiem pour Demain
Requiem pour Demain by Daniel Walther Cover: Nouvelle Edition Oswald,
1982 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. N.E.O.
Nouvelle Edition Oswald (c) 1982 N.E.O. Nouvelle Edition Oswald)

Sons of the Ocean Deeps
Sons of the Ocean Deeps by Bryce Walton Cover: John C. Winston Co., 1952
illustration by Paul Orban (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. John c. Winston Company (c) 1952 John C. Winston
Company)

Wild Goose Chase, The
The Wild Goose Chase by Rex Warner Cover: Lowe and Brydonne Ltd., 1944
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lowe and
Brydone Ltd. (c) 1944 Lowe and Brydone Ltd. UK)

Palafox
Palafox by Sandys Wason Cover: Cope and Femrick, 1927 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cope and Femrick (c) 1927
Cope and Femrick)

Probability Pad, The
The Probability Pad by Thomas Waters. Cover: Pyramid Books, 1970 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1970 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Tactical Exercise
Tactical Exercise by Evelyn Waugh Cover: Little, Brown & Co., 1954 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Published by
Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c) 1954 Little, Brown and Company
(Inc.))

Mercedes Nights
Mercedes Nights by Michael D. Weaver Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1987
(First Edition) illustration by Bill Sienkewicz (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cover: Bill Sienkewicz. Courtesy
of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1987 St. Martin's Press)

Insurrection
Insurrection by David Weber Cover: Baen Books, 1990 illustration by Paul
Alexander (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection. Reprinted with permission of
BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1990 Baen Books)

Hijack
Hijack by Edward Wellen Cover: Beagle, 1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Beagle (c) 1971 Beagle)

Wrath of Ashar
Wrath of Ashar by Angus Wells Cover: Bantam, 1990 illustration by Larry
Elmore (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used
by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Bantam Books)

Planets of Adventure
Planets of Adventure by Basil Wells Cover: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1949
illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Publishing Co. (c) 1949 Fantasy Publishing Co.)

Star of the Unborn
Star of the Unborn by Franz Werfel Cover: Bantam, 1976 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1976
Bantam Books)

Phantom City, The
The Phantom City by William Westall Cover: Cassell & Co. (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Sweepers of the Sea
Sweepers of the Sea by Claude Wetmore Cover: The Bowen-Merrill Co., 1900
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Matters of Form
Matters of Form by Scott Wheeler Cover: DAW Books, 1987 illustration by
Vincent Di Fate (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1987 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Spaceflight - Venus
Spaceflight - Venus by Philip Wilding Cover: Hennel Licke Ltd., 1954
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Hennel Licke Ltd. (c) 1954 Hennel Licke Ltd.)

Valley Beyond Time
Valley Beyond Time by Vaughn Wilkins Cover: Jonathan Cape, 1955 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1955 Johnathan Cape
London)

Many Dimensions
Many Dimensions by Charles Williams Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1931
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1931
Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Richardson Story, The
The Richardson Story by Frank Williams Cover: Heinemann, 1951 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1951 William Heinemann, Ltd. )

Micronauts, The
The Micronauts by Gordon Williams Cover: Bantam, 1977 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977
Bantam Books)

Sex Pill, The
The Sex Pill by J.X. Williams Cover: Phoenix Press, 1968 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Phoenix Press (c) 1968
Phoenix Press)

Martian Spring
Martian Spring by Michael Lindsay Williams Cover: Avon Books, 1986 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1986 Avon Books)

Station X
Station X by G. McLeod Winsor Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
House UK Limited. (c) Herbert Jenkins Ltd.)

Space Egg, The
The Space Egg by Russ Winterbotham Cover: Monarch Books, 1962
illustration by Jack Schoenherr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside.Monarch Books, Inc. (c) 1962 Monarch Books, Inc.)

Starluck
Starluck by Don Wismer Cover: Dell, 1986 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1986 Dell
Books)

Guerilleres, Les
Les Gueilleres by Monique Wittig Cover: Avon Books, 1973 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1973 Avon Books)

Star God
Star God by Allen L. Wold Cover: Bart, 1988 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Bart. (c) 1988 Bart)

Journey of the Oceanauts
Journey of the Oceanauts by Louis Wolfe Cover: Pyramid Books, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

London's Burning
London's Burning by Barbara Wootton Cover: Allen & Unwin, 1936 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1936
Allen & Unwin)

Thief of Bagdad
Thief of Bagdad by Richard Wormser Cover: Dell, 1961 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1961
Dell Books)

Matter of Oaths, A
A Matter of Oaths by Helen S. Wright Cover: Popular Library, 1990
illustration by Martin Andrews (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1990
Popular Library)

Swiss Family Robinson, The
The Swiss Family Robinson by Johan Rudolf Wyss Cover: Ernest Nister, 1899
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Lost Prince, The
The Lost Prince by Paul Edwin Zimmer Cover: Berkley, 1983 illustration by
PBJ Books, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1983 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Outpost Mars
Outpost Mars by C.M. Kornbluth & Judith Merril Cover: Dell, 1954
illustration by Richard Powers (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1954 Dell)

Puttering About in a Small Land
Puttering About in a Small Land by Philip K. Dick Cover: Academy Chicago
Publishers (First Edition) illustration by Armen Kohoyian (M. M. Kavanagh.
(c) 1985 Academy Chicago)

Street Lethal
Street Lethal by Steven Barnes Cover: Ace Books, 1983 illustration by
Barclay Shaw (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1983 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Soul of the Robot, The
The Soul of the Robot by Barrington Bayley Cover: Allison & Busby, 1974
illustration by Richard Glyn Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Allison & Busby (UK) (c) 1974 Allison & Busby)

Wizard of Lemuria, The
The Wizard of Lemuria by Lin Carter Cover: Ace Books, 1965 illustration
by Sray Morrow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1965 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Midnight Dancers, The
The Midnight Dancers by Gerard Conway Cover: Ace Books, 1972 illustration
by Dani Maltzer (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1972 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

StarBridge
StarBridge by A.C. Crispin Cover: Ace Books, 1989 illustration by Boris
Vallejo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Second Game
Second Game by Charles De Vet Cover: DAW Books, 1981 illustration by
Michael Mariano (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1981 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Jewels of Aptor, The
The Jewels of Aptor by Samuel R. Delany Cover: Ace Books, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1978 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Solar Lottery
Solar Lottery by Philip K. Dick Cover: Arrow Books (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Arrow Books. )

Sparrowhawk
Sparrowhawk by Thomas Easton Cover: Ace Books, 1990 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Prodigal Sun, The
The Prodigal Sun by Philip E. High Cover: Ace Books, 1964 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1964 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

On Wheels
On Wheels by John Jakes Cover: Warner Books, 1973 illustration by
Donchatz (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1973 Warner Books)

Planet of the Double Sun, The
The Planet of the Double Sun by Neil R. Jones Cover: Ace Books, 1967
illustration by Gray Morrow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Quiet Pools, The
The Quiet Pools by Michael Kube-McDowell Cover: Ace Books, 1990 (First
Edition) illustration by Chris Moore (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Worlds of the Imperium
Worlds of the Imperium by Keith Laumer Cover: Ace Books, 1962 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1962 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Ring, The
The Ring by Robert E. Margroff & Piers Anthony Cover: Ace Books, 1969
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Rite of Passage
Rite of Passage by Alexei Panshin Cover: Ace Books, 1968 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1968 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Probability Corner, The
The Probability Corner by Walt & Leigh Richmond Cover: Ace Books, 1977
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1977 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Pavane
Pavane by Keith Roberts Cover: Ace Books, 1969 illustration by Leo &
Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1969 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Men and The Mirror, The
The Men and The Mirror by Ross Rocklynne Cover: Ace Books, 1973 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1973 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Sight of Proteus
Sight of Proteus by Charles Sheffield Cover: Ace Books, 1978 illustration
by Clyde Caldwell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1978 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Wild Card Run
Wild Card Run by Sara Stamey Cover: Ace Books, 1987 illustration by
Stephen Hall (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1987 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Warlock in Spite of Himself, The
The Warlock in Spite of Himself by Christopher Stasheff Cover: Ace Books,
1969 illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

King's Blood Four
King's Blood Four by Sheri S. Tepper Cover: Ace Books, 1989 illustration
by James Christensen (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Second Ending
Second Ending by James White Cover: Ace Books, 1962 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1962 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Rebellious Stars (The Stars, Like Dust), The
The Rebellious Stars (The Stars, Like Dust) by Isaac Asimov Cover: Ace
Books, 1951 (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1951 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

World Jones Made, The
The World Jones Made by Philip K. Dick Cover: Ace Books, 1956
illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1956 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Ganymede Takeover, The
The Ganymede Takeover by Philip K. Dick & Ray Nelson Cover: Ace Books,
1967 illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1967 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Space Chantey
Space Chantey by R.A. Lafferty Cover: Ace Books, 1968 illustration by
Vaughn Bode (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Mechasm
Mechasm by John T. Sladek Cover: Ace Books, 1969 (First US Edition)
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Phoenix and the Mirror, The
The Phoenix and the Mirror by Avram Davidson Cover: Ace Books, 1970
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Soft Targets
Soft Targets by Dean Ing Cover: Ace Books, 1979 illustration by Deal
Ellis (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1979 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Interfaces
Interfaces by Virginia Kidd Cover: Ace Books, 1980 illustration by Alex
Abel (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1980 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Them Bones
Them Bones by Howard Waldrop Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1984 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Peace Company
Peace Company by Roland Green Cover: Ace Books, 1985 illustration by Luis
Royo (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1985 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws. )

On Stranger Tides
On Stranger Tides by Tim Powers Cover: Ace Books, 1988 illustration by
James Gurney (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1988 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Tides of God, The
The Tides of God by Ted Reynolds Cover: Ace Books, 1989 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Wall at the Edge of the World, The
The Wall at the Edge of the World by Jim Aikin Cover: Ace Books (First
Edition) illustration by John Jude Palencar (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 19
Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

We Claim These Stars
We Claim These Stars by Poul Anderson Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 19 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

The Ship That Sailed the Time Stream
The Ship That Sailed the Time Stream by G.C. Edmondson Cover: Ace Books
(First Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1965Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Oxygen Barons, The
The Oxygen Barons by Gregory Feeley Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Dave Archer (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Neuromancer
Neuromancer by William Gibson Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1984 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Growing up in Tier 3000
Growing up in Tier 3000 by Felix C. Gotschalk Cover: Ace Books (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1975 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Left Hand of Darkness, The
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin Cover: Ace Books, 1969
(First Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

World Swappers, The
The World Swappers by John Brunner Cover: Ace Books illustration by Kelly
Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Man with Nine Lives, The
The Man with Nine Lives by Harlan Ellison Cover: Ace Books, 1960 (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1960 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Million Year Hunt, The
The Million Year Hunt by Kenneth Bulmer Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1964 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

New Worlds of Fantasy
New Worlds of Fantasy by Terry Carr Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Lords of the Starship
Lords of the Starship by Mark Geston Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by John Schoenherr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Past Master
Past Master by R.A. Lafferty Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1968 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Star Well
Star Well by Alexei Panshin Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) illustration
by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Island Under the Earth, The
The Island Under the Earth by Avram Davidson Cover: Ace Books, 1969
(First Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Preserving Machine, The
The Preserving Machine by Philip K. Dick Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws. )

Nine Hundred Grandmothers
Nine Hundred Grandmothers by R.A. Lafferty Cover: Ace Books, 1970 (First
Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Mister Justice
Mister Justice by Doris Piserchia Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1973 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Ten Thousand Light-Years from Home
Ten Thousand Light-Years From Home by James Tiptree, Jr. Cover: Ace
Books, 1973 (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1973 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

White Light
White Light by Rudy Rucker Cover: Ace Books, 1980 (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1980 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Spacetime Donuts
Spacetime Donuts by Rudy Rucker Cover: Ace Books, 1981 (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1981 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Software
Software by Rudy Rucker Cover: Ace Books, 1982 (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1982 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

57th Franz Kafka, The
The 57th Franz Kafka by Rudy Rucker Cover: Ace Books, (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1983 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Wild Shore, The
The Wild Shore by Kim Stanley Robinson Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (First
Edition) illustration by Andrea Baruffi (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1984 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Icehenge
Icehenge by Kim Stanley Robinson Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (First Edition)
illustration by Mark Weber (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1984 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Green Eyes
Green Eyes by Lucius Shepard Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (First Edition)
illustration by Kathryn Holt (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1984 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Homunculus
Homunculus by James P. Blaylock Cover: Ace Books, 1986 (First Edition)
illustration by James Warhola (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Net, The
The Net by Loren MacGregor Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) illustration
by Earl Keleny (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Metrophage
Metrophage by Richard Kadrey Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1988 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Win, Lose, Draw
Win, Lose, Draw by Sara Stamey Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Stephen Hall (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1988 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Svaha
Svaha by Charles De Lint Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Stress of Her Regard, The
The Stress of Her Regard by Tim Powers Cover: Ace Books, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by James Gurney (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Orbital Decay
Orbital Decay by Allen Steele Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Romas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Redshift Rendezvous
Redshift Rendezvous by John E. Stith Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Alan M. Clark (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Songs of Chaos
Songs of Chaos by S.N. Lewitt Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Peter Bollinger (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1993 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Synthajoy
Synthajoy by D.G. Compton Cover: Ace Books, 1968 illustration by Leo &
Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction, Eighth series
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction, Eighth Series ed. by Anthony
Boucher Cover: Ace Books, c. 1960 illustration by Ed Emshwiller (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1960 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

When Smut Goes
When Smut Goes by Arthur Keppel-Jones Cover: African Bookman, 1947 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. African Bookman
(c) 1947 African Bookman)

Horror on the Asteroid, The
The Horror on the Asteroid by Edmond Hamilton Cover: Philip Allan, 1936
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Philip
Allan (c) 1936 Philip Allan)

Kairos
Kairos by Gwyneth Jones Cover: Allen & Unwin (First Edition) illustration
by John Millar (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins
Publishers Limited. (c) 1988 Allen & Unwin)

Journey in Other Worlds: A Romance of the Future
Journey in Other Worlds: A Romance of the Future by John Jacob Astor
Cover: Appleton, 1894 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Twistor
Twistor by John G. Cramer Cover: Arbor House, 1989 (First Edition)
illustration by Bob Eggleton (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c)
1989 Arbor House)

Moon of Ice
Moon of Ice by Brad Linaweaver Cover: Arbor House, 1988 illustration by
Peter Thorpe (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1988
Arbor House)

Soldiers of Paradise
Soldiers of Paradise by Paul Park Cover: Avon Books, 1990 illustration by
Gary Ruddell (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1990 Avon Books)

Talking Man
Talking Man by Terry Bisson Cover: Arbor House (First Edition)
illustration by Stephen Gervais (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of
William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1988 Arbor House)

Islands in the Net
Islands in the Net by Bruce Sterling Cover: Arbor House, 1988 (First
Edition) illustration by Don Bolognese (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1988 Arbor House)

Someone in the Dark
Someone in the Dark by August Derleth Cover: Arkham House, 1941 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Arkham
House Publishers. (c) 1941 by Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Web of Easter Island, The
The Web of Easter Island by Donald Wandrei Cover: Arkham House, 1948
(First Edition) illustration by Audrey Johnson (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Arkham House
Publishers. (c) 1948 by Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Jaguar Hunter, The
The Jaguar Hunter by Lucius Shepard Cover: Arkham House, 1987 (First
Edition) illustration by Jeffrey K. Potter (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of
Arkham House Publishers. (c) 1987 by Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Who Made Stevie Crye?
Who Made Stevie Crye? by Michael Bishop Cover: Arkham House (First
Edition) illustration by Glennray Tutor (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of
Arkham House Publishers. (c) Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Moon-Flash
Moon-Flash by Patricia McKillip Cover: Berkley, 1985 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1985 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Rim of Space, The
The Rim of Space by A. Bertram Chandler Cover: Avalon Books, 1963 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Thomas
Bouregy & Co. - Avalon Books (c) 1963 Avalon Books)

Green Planet, The
The Green Planet by Joan Hunter Holly Cover: Avalon Books, 1961
illustration by Jack Schoenherr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Thomas Bouregy & Co. - Avalon Books (c)
1961 Avalon Books)

Perfect Planet, The
The Perfect Planet by Evelyn E. Smith Cover: Lancer Books, 1963 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lancer Books (c)
1963 Lancer)

Quarreling, They Met the Dragon
Quarreling, They Met the Dragon by Sharon Baker Cover: Avon Books, 1984
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1984 Avon Books)

Living Way Out
Living Way Out by Wyman Guin Cover: Avon Books, 1967 (First Edition)
illustration by Ronald Walosky (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University
of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1967 Avon
Books)

Song for Lya and Other Stories, A
A Song for Lya and Other Stories by George R.R. Martin Cover: Avon Books,
1976 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1976 Avon Books)

Saltflower
Saltflower by Sydney J. Van Scyoc Cover: Avon Books, 1977 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1977 Avon Books)

Macroscope
Macroscope by Piers Anthony Cover: Avon Books, 1969 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon Books)

Moderan
Moderan by David R. Bunch Cover: Avon Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) Avon Books)

No Time Like the Future
No Time Like the Future by Nelson Bond Cover: Avon Books (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1954 Avon Books)

Little Fuzzy
Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper Cover: Avon Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1962 Avon Books)

Pure Cold Light, The
The Pure Cold Light by Gregory Frost Cover: Avon Books/AvoNova (First
Edition) illustration by Gregory Frost (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1993 AvoNova)

In the Country of the Blind
In the Country of the Blind by Michael Flynn Cover: Baen Books, 1990
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1990 Baen Books)

Petrogypsies
Petrogypsies by Rory Harper Cover: Baen Books, 1989 illustration by Tom
Kidd (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1989 Baen
Books)

Khyren
Khyren by Aline Boucher Kaplan Cover: Baen Books, 1988 illustration by
Larry Schwinger (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1988 Baen Books)

Marching Through Georgia
Marching Through Georgia by S.M. Stirling Cover: Baen Books, 1988
illustration by Kevin Davies (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING
ENTERPRISES. (c) 1988 Baen Books)

Torch of Honor, The
The Torch of Honor by Roger MacBride Allen Cover: Baen Books, 1986 (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1986 Baen Books)

Shards of Honor
Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold Cover: Baen Books, 1986 (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1986 Baen Books)

Master of the Fist
Master of the Fist by Edward P. Hughes Cover: Baen Books, 1989
illustration by Ken Kelly (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1989 Baen Books)

Man-Kzin Wars, The
The Man-Kzin Wars created by Larry Niven with Poul Anderson & Dean Ing
Cover: Baen Books, 1989 illustration by Steve Hickman (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1989 Baen
Books)

ME: A Novel of Self-Discovery
ME: A Novel of Self-Discovery by Thomas T. Thomas Cover: Baen Books, 1991
(First Edition) illustration by Gary Ruddel (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted
with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1991 Baen Books)

Hunting Party
Hunting Party by Elizabeth Moon Cover: Baen Books (First Edition)
illustration by Stephen Hickman (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission
of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1993 Baen Books)

Whole Man, The
The Whole Man by John Brunner Cover: Walker & Co., 1970 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Walker and Company. (c) 1970 Walker & Company)

Tarnsman of Gor
Tarnsman of Gor by John Norman Cover: Tandem (British Reprint) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Tandem. (c) 19
Tandem)

Night Walk
Night Walk by Bob Shaw Cover: Banner, 1967 (First Edition) illustration
by Frank Frazetta (M. M. Kavanagh. Banner. (c) 1967 Banner)

Lani People, The
The Lani People by J.F. Bone Cover: Bantam, 1962 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1962
Bantam Books)

Startide Rising
Startide Rising by David Brin Cover: Bantam, 1983 (First Edition)
illustration by Jim Burns (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1983
Bantam Books)

Reach
Reach by Edward Gibson Cover: Doubleday, 1989 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1989 Doubleday)

Mutant Prime, The
The Mutant Prime by Karen Haber Cover: Doubleday, 1990 (First Edition)
illustration by Jim Burns (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Doubleday)

High Couch of Silistra
High Couch of Silistra by Janet E. Morris Cover: Bantam, 1977 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1977 Bantam Books)

Paradise Plot, The
The Paradise Plot by Ed Naha Cover: Bantam, 1980 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1980
Bantam Books)

Labyrinth Gate, The
The Labyrinth Gate by Alis A. Rasmussen Cover: Bantam, 1988 (First
Edition) illustration by Larry Schwinger (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1988
Bantam Books)

Neverness
Neverness by David Zindell Cover: Bantam, 1989 illustration by Don Dixon
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1989 Bantam Books)

Third from the Sun
Third from the Sun by Richard Matheson Cover: Bantam, 1955 (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1955 Bantam Books)

Rama Revealed
Rama Revealed by Arthur C. Clarke & Gentry Lee Cover: Bantam, 1995 (First
Edition) illustration by Stephen Youll (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Synners
Synners by Pat Cadigan Cover: Bantam (First Edition) illustration by
Francisco Maruca (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Slow Fall to Dawn
Slow Fall to Dawn by Stephen Leigh Cover: Bantam (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Missing Matter, The
The Missing Matter by Thomas R. McDonough Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Memories
Memories by Mike McQuay Cover: Bantam (First Edition) illustration by
Frank Riley (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Red Genesis
Red Genesis by S.C. Sykes Cover: Bantam (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh.
Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Line to Tomorrow
Line to Tomorrow by Lewis Padgett Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by M. Hooks (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1954
Bantam Books)

Star Trek 1
Star Trek 1 by James Blish Cover: Bantam, 1967 (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1967 Bantam Books)

Venus of Dreams
Venus of Dreams by Pamela Sargent Cover: Bantam, 1986 (First Edition)
illustration by Pamela Lee (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1986
Bantam Books)

Lincoln's Dreams
Lincoln's Dreams by Connie Willis Cover: Bantam, 1987 (First Edition)
illustration by Keith Batcheller (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Memory Wire
Memory Wire by Robert Charles Wilson Cover: Bantam (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Wild Cards: A Mosaic Novel
Wild Cards: A Mosaic Novel ed. by George R.R. Martin Cover: Bantam (First
Edition) illustration by Stan Watts (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Strange Invasion
Strange Invasion by Michael Kandel Cover: Bantam, 1989 (First Edition)
illustration by Edwin B. Hirth III (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1989 Bantam Books)

On My Way to Paradise
On My Way to Paradise by Dave Wolverton Cover: Bantam, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by Steve and Paul Youll (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1989 Bantam Books)

Spirit Crossings
Spirit Crossings by Claudia Peck Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by Mike McGinty (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1991
Bantam Books)

Silicon Man, The
The Silicon Man by Charles Platt Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by Jean Francois Poderin (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1991 Bantam Books)

Sheltered Lives
Sheltered Lives by Charles Oberndorf Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by Oscar Chichoni (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1992 Bantam Books)

Growing up Weightless
Growing up Weightless by John M. Ford Cover: Bantam, 1993 (First Edition)
illustration by Pamela Lee (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1993
Bantam Books)

Love & Sleep
Love & Sleep by John Crowley Cover: Bantam, 1994 (First Edition)
illustration by Jamie S. Warren Youll (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1994 Bantam Books)

In the Mothers' Land
In the Mothers' Land by Elisabeth Vonarburg Cover: Bantam, 1992 (First US
Edition) illustration by Oscar Chichoni (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1992 Bantam Books)

Mind Parasites, The
The Mind Parasites by Colin Wilson Cover: Barker, 1967 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Barker. (c)
1967 Barker)

Pagan Passions
Pagan Passions by Randall Garrett & Larry M. Harris (Laurence M. Janifer)
Cover: Beacon (First Edition) illustration by Robert Stanley (M. M.
Kavanagh. Beacon Press. (c) 1959 Beacon Press)

Odyssey to Earthdeath
Odyssey to Earthdeath by Leo P. Kelley Cover: Belmont, 1968 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Belmont Books (c)
1968 Belmont )

Unearth People, The
The Unearth People by Kris Neville Cover: Belmont, 1964 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Belmont Books (c) 1964
Belmont )

Of Godlike Power
Of Godlike Power by Mack Reynolds Cover: Belmont (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Belmont Books. (c) 1966 Belmont )

Shadow of Alpha, The
The Shadow of Alpha by Charles L. Grant Cover: Berkley, 1970 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1970 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Stranger in a Strange Land
Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein Cover: Berkley, 1970 (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1970 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Transfinite Man, The
The Transfinite Man by Colin Kapp Cover: Berkley, 1964 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1964 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Manifest Destiny
Manifest Destiny by Barry B. Longyear Cover: Berkley, 1980 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1980 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Garbage World
Garbage World by Charles Platt Cover: Berkley, 1967 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1967 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Stardust Voyages, The
The Stardust Voyages by Stephen Tall Cover: Berkley, 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1975 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

ParasaurIans, The
The ParasaurIans by Robert Wells Cover: Berkley, 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1969 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Mile-Long Spaceship, The
The Mile-Long Spaceship by Kate Wilhelm Cover: Berkley, 1963 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1963 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Quy Effect, The
The Quy Effect by Arthur Sellings Cover: Berkley, 1967 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1967 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Reefs of Earth, The
The Reefs of Earth by R.A. Lafferty Cover: Berkley, 1968 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1968 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Sardonyx Net, The
The Sardonyx Net by Elizabeth Lynn Cover: Berkley, 1981 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1981 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Spectrum 5
Spectrum 5 ed. by Kingsley Amis & Robert Conquest Cover: Berkley, 1968
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 The Berkley Publishing Group.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Terminal Beach, The
The Terminal Beach by J.G. Ballard Cover: Berkley (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Passport to Eternity
Passport to Eternity by J.G. Ballard Cover: Berkley (First Edition)
illustration by Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1963 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Ring of Ritornel, The
The Ring of Ritornel by Charles L. Harness Cover: Berkley, 1968 (First
Edition) illustration by Paul Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1968 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Titan's Daughter
Titan's Daughter by James Blish Cover: Berkley, 1961 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1961 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Grimm's World
Grimm's World by Vernor Vinge Cover: Berkley, 1969 (First Edition) Cover:
Don Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1969 The Berkley Publishing
Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Tintagel
Tintagel by Paul Cook Cover: Berkley (First Edition) illustration by
Richard Lon Cohen & John Townley (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1981 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Vector Analysis
Vector Analysis by Jack Haldeman Cover: Berkley, 1978 illustration by
Norman Adams & Sol Novins (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1978 The Berkley Publishing Group.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Missing Man, The
The Missing Man by Katherine MacLean Cover: Berkley (First Edition)
illustration by Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1975 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Rapture Effect, The
The Rapture Effect by Jeffrey A. Carver Cover: Tom Doherty
Associates/TOR/Bluejay, 1987 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Book jackets reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books
Inc. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 Bluejay Books Inc. )

Planet of Whispers
Planet of Whispers by James Patrick Kelly Cover: Tom Doherty
Associates/TOR/Bluejay, 1985 illustration by Victoria Poyser (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Book jackets
reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books Inc. All rights reserved. (c)
1985 Bluejay Books Inc.)

Song of Kali
Song of Kali by Dan Simmons Cover: TOR, 1986 illustration by Jill Bauman
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1986 Tor Books)

Impossible Things
Impossible Things by Connie Willis Cover: Bantam, 1993 (First Edition)
illustration by John Jude Palencar (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1993 Bantam Books)

Widow's Son, the
The Widow's Son by Robert Anton Wilson Cover: Tom Doherty
Associates/TOR/Bluejay (First Edition) illustration by Bryn Barnard (M. M.
Kavanagh. Book jackets reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books Inc. All
rights reserved. (c) 1985 Bluejay Books Inc.)

Two Hours to Doom
Two Hours to Doom by Peter Bryant Cover: Boardman, 1958 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Boardman
(c) 1958 Boardman)

Murder Madness
Murder Madness by Will Jenkins (Murray Leinster) Cover: Brewer and
Warren, 1931 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1931 Brewer and Warren)

Gulliver of Mars
Gulliver of Mars by Edwin Lester Arnold Cover: Ace Books illustration by
Frank Frazetta (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1964 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Misplaced Persons
Misplaced Persons by Lee Harding Cover: Bantam, 1983 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1983
Bantam Books)

Time Trap
Time Trap by Rog Phillips Cover: Century, 1949 (First Edition)
illustration by Malcolm Smith (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited (c) 1949
Century)

Unquenchable Fire
Unquenchable Fire by Rachel Pollack Cover: Century (First Edition)
illustration by Philippa Bramson (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Random
Century House UK Limited (c) 1988 Century)

Hadrian the Seventh
Hadrian the Seventh by Frederick Rolfe Cover: Chatto and Windus (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. )

Hiero's Journey
Hiero's Journey by Sterling E. Lanier Cover: Bantam, 1974 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1974 Bantam Books)

Starcrossed, The
The Starcrossed by Ben Bova Cover: Chilton, 1975 (First Edition)
illustration by Craven & Evans (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Vincent Di
Fate. (c) 1975 Chilton Book Company)

Verging on the Pertinent
Verging on the Pertinent by Carol Emshwiller Cover: Coffee House, 1989
(First Edition) illustration by Janice Perry (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1989
Coffee House Press)

Great War Syndicate, The
The Great War Syndicate by Frank R. Stockton Cover: Collier, 1889 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Tin Men, The
The Tin Men by Michael Frayn Cover: Ace Books, 1965 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1965 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Machine That Thought, The
The Machine That Thought by William Callahan (Raymond Z. Gallun) Cover:
Columbia, 1942 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc. (c) 1942 Columbia)

Sundered Worlds, The
The Sundered Worlds by Michael Moorcock Cover: Compact, 1965 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Lifetime Books. (c) 1965 Compact Books)

Pennterra
Pennterra by Judith Moffett Cover: Congdon & Weed, 1987 illustration by
Bryn Barnard (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Congdon & Weed (c) 1987 Congdon and Weed)

Man Who Pulled Down the Sky, The
The Man Who Pulled Down the Sky by John Barnes Cover: Congdon & Weed
(First Edition) illustration by Bob Eggleton (M. M. Kavanagh. Congdon &
Weed (c) 1986 Congdon and Weed)

Station Gehenna
Station Gehenna by Andrew Weiner Cover: Congdon & Weed (First Edition)
illustration by Bob Eggleton (M. M. Kavanagh. Congdon & Weed (c) 1987
Congdon and Weed)

Night of the Big Heat, The
The Night of the Big Heat by John Lymington Cover: Hodder & Stoughton
Ltd., 1959 illustration by Peter Rudland (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1959 Hodder and Stoughton Ltd.)

Revolt on Alpha C.
Revolt on Alpha C. by Robert Silverberg Cover: Tab Books, 1959
illustration by William Meyerriecks (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Tab Books, Inc. (c) 1959 Tab Books, Inc.)

Sound of His Horn, The
The Sound of His Horn by Sarban Cover: Davies, 1952 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Davies (c) 1952 Davies)

Gate of Ivrel
Gate of Ivrel by C.J. Cherryh Cover: DAW Books, 1976 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1976 DAW Books, Inc.)

Mirror Image
Mirror Image by Michael G. Coney Cover: DAW Books, 1972 illustration by
Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1972 DAW Books, Inc.)

Warriors of Dawn, The
The Warriors of Dawn by M.A. Foster Cover: DAW Books, 1975 illustration
by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1975 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Walkers on the Sky
Walkers on the Sky by David J. Lake Cover: DAW Books, 1976 illustration
by Richard Hescox (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1976 DAW
Books, Inc.)

2018 A.D.
2018 A.D. by Sam J. Lundwell Cover: DAW Books, 1975 illustration by Josh
Kirby (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1975 DAW Books, Inc.)

Passing for Human
Passing for Human by Jody Scott Cover: DAW Books, 1977 illustration by
Bob Pepper (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1977 DAW Books, Inc.)

Space Opera
Space Opera by Jack Vance Cover: DAW Books, 1965 illustration by Don
Maitz (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c)
1965 DAW Books, Inc.)

Merovingen Nights Festival Moon
Merovingen Nights Festival Moon by C.J. Cherryh Cover: DAW Books, 1987
illustration by Tim Hildbrandt (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission
of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1987 DAW Books, Inc.)

Spaceship for the King, A
A Spaceship for the King by Jerry Pournelle Cover: DAW Books (First
Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1973 DAW Books, Inc.)

We Can Build You
We Can Build You by Philip K. Dick Cover: DAW Books, 1972 (First Edition)
illustration by John Schoenherr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission
of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1972 DAW Books, Inc.)

Whenabouts of Burr, The
The Whenabouts of Burr by Michael Kurland Cover: DAW Books (First
Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1975 DAW Books, Inc.)

Hellflower
Hellflower by Eluki bes Shahar Cover: DAW Books (First Edition)
illustration by Nicholas Jainschigg (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1991 DAW Books, Inc.)

Joshua, Son of None
Joshua, Son of None by Nancy Freedman Cover: Delacorte Press, 1973 (First
Edition) illustration by Paul Bacon (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Delecorte Press, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1973
Delecorte Press.)

Sirens of Titan, The
The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. Cover: Dell, 1959 (First
Edition) illustration by Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1959 Dell Books)

Penultimate Truth, The
The Penultimate Truth by Philip K. Dick Cover: Dell, 1980 (First Edition)
illustration by Richard Corben (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1980
Dell Books)

Golden Apple, The
The Golden Apple by Robert Shea & Robert Anton Wilson Cover: Dell, 1975
illustration by Carlos Victor (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1975
Dell Books)

Logan's Run
Logan's Run by William Nolan Cover: Dial Books, 1967 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1967 Dial Books)

Ophiuchi Hotline, The
The Ophiuchi Hotline by John Varley Cover: Dial Books, 1977 (First
Edition) illustration by Boris Vallejo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977 Dial Books)

In the Ocean of Night
In the Ocean of Night by Gregory Benford Cover: Dial Press, 1977 (First
Edition) illustration by Larry Kresek (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1977 Dial Press)

Thunder and Lightning Man, The
The Thunder and Lightning Man by Colin Cooper Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd.
, 1968 (First Edition) illustration by Charles Mozley (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cover: Charles Mozley.
Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1968 Faber & Faber)

Marooned
Marooned by Martin Caidin Cover: Bantam, 1969 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1969
Bantam Books)

What Happened to Emily Goode After the Great Exhibition?
What Happened to Emily Goode After the Great Exhibition? by Raylyn Moore
Cover: Donning, 1978 (First Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Donning Company
Starblaze Editions (c) 1978 Donning Company Starblaze Editions)

Tin Woodman
Tin Woodman by David F. Bischoff & Dennis R. Bailey Cover: Doubleday,
1979 illustration by Gary Mouteferante (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979 Doubleday)

Goddess of Atvatabar, The
The Goddess of Atvatabar by William R. Bradshaw Cover: J.F. Donthitt,
1892 (First Edition) illustration by C. Durand Chapman (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1892 J. F. Donthitt )

Sibyl Sue Blue
Sibyl Sue Blue by Rosel George Brown Cover: Doubleday, 1966 illustration
by John Alcorn (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1966 Doubleday)

Sunrise West
Sunrise West by William K. Carlson Cover: Doubleday, 1981 illustration by
Marge Herr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1981 Doubleday)

Navigator's Sindrome
Navigator's Sindrome by Jayge Carr Cover: Doubleday, 1983 illustration by
Jan Esteves (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1983 Doubleday)

No Place on Earth
No Place on Earth by Louis Charbonneau Cover: Doubleday, 1958 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1958 Doubleday)

Mission of Gravity
Mission of Gravity by Hal Clement Cover: Doubleday, 1954 (First Edition)
illustration by Joe Magnaini (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1954 Doubleday)

Masters of Solitude
Masters of Solitude by Parke Godwin & Marvin Kaye Cover: Doubleday, 1978
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1978 Doubleday)

Sword-Swallower, The
The Sword-Swallower by Ron Goulart Cover: Doubleday, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1970 Doubleday)

Pilgrimage: The Book of the People
Pilgrimage: The Book of the People by Zenna Henderson Cover: Avon Books,
1961 (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown
by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1961 Avon Books)

It Can't Happen Here
It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis Cover: Doubleday, 1961 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1961 Doubleday)

House of Zeor
House of Zeor by Jacqueline Lichtenberg Cover: Doubleday, 1977 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1977 Doubleday)

How the Gods Wove in Kyrannon
How the Gods Wove in Kyrannon by Ardath Mayhar Cover: Doubleday, 1982
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1982 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

World out of Mind
World out of Mind by J.T. McIntosh Cover: Doubleday, 1953 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1953 Doubleday)

West of the Sun
West of the Sun by Edgar Pangborn Cover: Doubleday, 1980 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1980 Doubleday)

Pig World
Pig World by Charles Runyon Cover: Lancer Books, 1971 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Lancer Books (c) 1971 Lancer)

No One Goes There Now
No One Goes There Now by William Walling Cover: Doubleday, 1971 (First
Edition) illustration by Marvin Mattelson (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971
Doubleday)

Healer
Healer by F. Paul Wilson Cover: Dell, 1977 illustration by Kresek (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1977 Dell Books)

Killerbowl
Killerbowl by Gary K. Wolf Cover: Doubleday, 1975 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1975 Doubleday)

Mike Mars, Astronaut
Mike Mars, Astronaut by Don Wollheim Cover: Doubleday, 1961 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1961 Doubleday)

His Monkey Wife
His Monkey Wife by John Collier Cover: Doubleday, 1957 illustration by
Margot Tomes (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division
of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1957 Doubleday)

Kai Lung Unrolls His Mat
Kai Lung Unrolls His Mat by Ernest Bramah Cover: Doubleday Doran, 1928
(First US Edition) illustration by J. Nadejen (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1928 Doubleday Doran)

Long Tomorrow, The
The Long Tomorrow by Leigh Brackett Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Docktor (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Doubleday)

Martian Chronicles, The
The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Lidov (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Doubleday)

Novelty
Novelty by John Crowley Cover: Doubleday, 1989 (First Edition)
illustration by Mike Fisher (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1989 Doubleday)

Revolving Boy, The
The Revolving Boy by Gertrude Friedberg Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Tom Chibbaro (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
Doubleday)

Keepers of the Gate
Keepers of the Gate by Steven Spruill Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh (c) Doubleday)

Shadow on the Hearth
Shadow on the Hearth by Judith Merril Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Edward Kasper (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1950 Doubleday)

Lucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter
Lucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter by Paul French (Isaac Asimov) Cover:
Doubleday, 1957 (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1957 Doubleday)

Torrent of Faces, A
A Torrent of Faces by Norman L. Knight Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by James Barkley (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1967Doubleday)

Lord of Light
Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny Cover: Doubleday, 1967 (First Edition)
illustration by Howard Bernstein (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1967 Doubleday)

Nova
Nova by Samuel R. Delany Cover: Doubleday, 1968 (First Edition)
illustration by Russell Fitzgerald (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1968 Doubleday)

Hieros Gamos and Sam and An Smith, The
The Hieros Gamos and Sam and An Smith by Josephine Saxton Cover:
Doubleday (First Edition) illustration by Peter Rauch (M. M. Kavanagh.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1969 Doubleday)

Gardens One to Five
Gardens One to Five by Peter Tate Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Catherine Hopkins (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1971 Doubleday)

Tarzan Alive
Tarzan Alive by Philip Jose Farmer Cover: Doubleday, 1972 (First Edition)
illustration by Milton Glaser (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1972 Doubleday)

Shining, The
The Shining by Stephen King Cover: Doubleday (First Edition) illustration
by Dave Christensen (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977
Doubleday)

Vergil in Averno
Vergil in Averno by Avram Davidson Cover: Doubleday, 1987 (First Edition)
illustration by Candy Jernigan (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1987 Doubleday)

Nothing Sacred
Nothing Sacred by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough Cover: Doubleday (First
Edition) illustration by Jamie S. Warren Youll (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1991
Doubleday)

Golden City, The
The Golden City by A. Hyatt Verrill Cover: Duffield, 1916 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

San Diego Lightfoot Sue
San Diego Lightfoot Sue by Tom Reamy Cover: Ace Books, 1983 (First
Edition) illustration by David Heffernan (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1983 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Unborn Tomorrow
Unborn Tomorrow by Gilbert Frankau Cover: Macdonald, 1953 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. MacDonald
(c) 1953 MacDonald )

Season of the Witch
Season of the Witch by Hank Stine Cover: Essex House, 1968 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Essex House (c)
1968 Essex House)

Lord of the Flies
Lord of the Flies by William Golding Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1954
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1954 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Mister da V. and other Stories
Mister da V. and other Stories by Kit Reed Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd.,
1967 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1967 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Tunc
Tunc by Lawrence Durrell Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1969 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Faber
and Faber Ltd. (c) 1969 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Inverted World
Inverted World by Christopher Priest Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1974
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1974
Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Non-Stop
Non-Stop by Brian W. Aldiss Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1958
illustration by Peter Curl (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Cover: Peter Curl. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c)
1958 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Sunken World, The
The Sunken World by Stanton Coblentz Cover: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1948
(First Edition) illustration by Charles E. McCurdy (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Publishing Co. (c) 1948
Fantasy Publishing Co.)

Genus Homo
Genus Homo by L. Sprague De Camp & P. Schayler Miller Cover: Fantasy
Press, 1950 (First Edition) illustration by Edd Cartier (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Press (c) 1950
Fantasy Press)

Titan, The
The Titan by P. Schuyler Miller Cover: Fantasy Press, 1952 (First
Edition) illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Fantasy Press (c) 1952 Fantasy Press)

Legion of Space, The
The Legion of Space by Jack Williamson Cover: Fantasy Press, 1947 (First
Edition) illustration by A.J. Donnell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Press (c) 1947 Fantasy Press)

Wrinkle in Time, A
A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle Cover: Farrar Straus & Giroux,
1970 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Jacket
design: Ellen Raskin. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux,
Inc. (c) 1970 Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. Design (c)1962, renewed 1990
Crosswicks Ltd.)

Love in the Ruins
Love in the Ruins by Percy Walker Cover: Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1981
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1981 Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc.)

Unspeakable Practices, Unnatural Acts
Unspeakable Practices, Unnatural Acts by Donald Barthelme Cover: Farrar
Straus & Giroux (First Edition) illustration by Janet Halverson (M. M.
Kavanagh. Jacket design: Janet Halverson after a lithograph by Daumier.
Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. (c) 1968 Donald
Barthelme)

Science Fiction Omnibus
Science Fiction Omnibus ed. by T.E. Dikty & Everett F. Bleiler Cover:
Garden City Books, 1952 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.
, Riverside. Courtesy of Lifetime Books, Inc. (c) 1952 Garden City Books)

Planets for Sale
Planets for Sale by E. Mayne Hull Cover: Fell, 1954 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Lifetime Books,
Inc. (c) 1954 Fell)

John Carstairs: Space Detective
John Carstairs: Space Detective by Frank Belknap Long Cover: Fell, 1949
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Lifetime Books, Inc. (c) 1949 Fell)

Saraband of Lost Time
Saraband of Lost Time by Richard Grant Cover: Avon Books (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) Avon Books)

Winterlong
Winterlong by Elizabeth Hand Cover: Bantam (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Pity About Earth
Pity About Earth by Ernest Hill Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1968 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Gemini God
Gemini God by Garry Kilworth Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1981 (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1981 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Hercules Text, The
The Hercules Text by Jack McDevitt Cover: Ace Books, 1986 (First Edition)
illustration by Earl Keleny (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Planet Buyer, The
The Planet Buyer by Cordwainer Smith Cover: Pyramid Books (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1964 Pyramid Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Marathon
Marathon by D. Alexander Smith Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1982 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Wild Sheep Chase, A
A Wild Sheep Chase by Haruki Murakami Cover: Kodansha, 1989 (First US
Edition) illustration by Shigeo Okamoto (M. M. Kavanagh. Kodansha (c) 1989
Kodansha)

Nightwatch
Nightwatch by Andrew M. Stephenson Cover: Dell, 1979 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979
Dell Books)

Prelude to Space
Prelude to Space by Arthur C. Clarke Cover: Galaxy, No. 3/World Editions,
Inc., 1951 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Galaxy (c) 1951 Galaxy, No. 3 World Editions, Inc. )

Warrior Who Carried Life, The
The Warrior Who Carried Life by Geoff Ryman Cover: Allen & Unwin, 1985
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1985 Allen & Unwin)

White Book
White Book by Pavel Kohut Cover: George Braziller, 1977 (First US
Edition) illustration by Ross Studio (M. M. Kavanagh. George Braziller (c)
1977 George Braziller)

Tomorrow and Tomorrow
Tomorrow and Tomorrow by M. Barnard Eldershaw Cover: Georgian House, 1948
illustration by Bruce Roberts (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Georgian House (c) 1948 Georgian House)

Minions of the Moon
Minions of the Moon by W.G. Beyer Cover: Gnome Press, 1950 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside.Gnome Press (c) 1950 Gnome)

They'd Rather Be Right
They'd Rather Be Right by Mark Clifton Cover: Gnome Press, 1957
illustration by W.I. Van de Poel (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside.Gnome Press (c) 1957 Gnome)

This Fortress World
This Fortress World by James Gunn Cover: Gnome Press, 1955 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gnome Press (c)
1955 Gnome)

Judgment Night
Judgment Night by C.L. Moore Cover: Gnome Press, 1952 (First Edition)
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Gnome Press (c) 1952 Gnome)

Shrouded Planet, The
The Shrouded Planet by Randall Garrett & Robert Silverberg Cover: Ace
Books, 1982 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1982 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Survivors, The
The Survivors by Tom Godwin Cover: Gnome Press, 1958 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gnome Press
(c) 1958 Gnome Press)

Golden Witchbreed
Golden Witchbreed by Mary Gentle Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1983 (First
Edition) illustration by Chris Brown (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with the permission of Victor
Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1983 Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Hole in the Zero
Hole in the Zero by M.K. Joseph Cover: Avon Books, 1967 illustration by
Ed Soyka (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside.
Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1967 Avon Books)

On Wings of Song
On Wings of Song by Thomas M. Disch Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1979
(First Edition) illustration by Malcolm Ashman (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted
with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1979 Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Roderick
Roderick by John T. Sladek Cover: Granada, 1980 (First Edition)
illustration by Ray Winder (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1980 Granada)

Wine of the Dreamers
Wine of the Dreamers by John MacDonald Cover: Greenberg, 1951 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Greenberg. )

Jack of Eagles
Jack of Eagles by James Blish Cover: Greenberg, 1952 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Greenberg (c) 1952 Greenberg)

If All Else Fails
If All Else Fails by Craig Strete Cover: Greenwillow, 1980 illustration
by Margo Herr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Greenwillow (c) 1980 Greenwillow)

Winterking
Winterking by Paul Hazel Cover: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1984 (First
Edition) illustration by David Palladini (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1984
Atlantic Monthly Press)

Nightshade
Nightshade by Jack Butler Cover: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by Byron Taylor (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1989 Atlantic
Monthly Press)

Heart of a Dog
Heart of a Dog by Mikhail Bulgakov Cover: Grove Press, 1968 (First US
Edition) illustration by Arnold Levin (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1968 Grove
Press)

Paris au XXe Siecle
Paris au XXe Siecle by Jules Verne Cover: Hachette, 1994 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Hachette Livre (c) 1994 Hachette Livre)

Mightiest Machine, The
The Mightiest Machine by John W. Campbell Cover: Hadley Publishing Co.,
1935 illustration by Robert Pailthorpa (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Hadley Publishing (c) 1935 Hadley Publishing
Company)

Space Hostages
Space Hostages by Nicholas Fisk Cover: Hamish Hamilton, 1967 illustration
by Dexter Brown (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1967 Hamish Hamilton )

Winds of Gath, The
The Winds of Gath by E.C. Tubb Cover: Ace Books, 1982 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1982 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Traveler from Altruria, A
A Traveler from Altruria by William Dean Howells Cover:
HarperCollins/Harper & Bros., 1908 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Texts of Festival, The
The Texts of Festival by Mick Farren Cover: Avon Books, 1975 (First US
Edition) (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside.
Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1975 Avon Books)

Star Man's Son: Daybreak-2250 A.D.
Star Man's Son: Daybreak-2250 A.D. by Andre Norton Cover: Ace Books
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1952 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Other Side of the Sun, The
The Other Side of the Sun by Paul Capon Cover: Heinemann, 1950 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1950 William
Heinemann, Ltd. )

Time Machine, The
The Time Machine by H.G. Wells Cover: Heinemann, 1895 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Mandrake
Mandrake by Susan Cooper Cover: Hodder and Stoughton, 1964 (First
Edition) illustration by John Woodcock (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of Hodder Headline,
POC. (c) 1964 Hodder and Stoughton)

Mind of Mr. Soames, The
The Mind of Mr. Soames by Charles Eric Maine Cover: Panther Books, 1969
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1969 Panther
Books)

Wine of Violence, The
The Wine of Violence by James Morrow Cover: Ace Books, 1982 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1982 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

War with the Newts, The
The War with the Newts by Karel Capek Cover: Bantam, 1959 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of The Oxford University Press. (c) 1959 Bantam)

Uncertain Midnight, The
The Uncertain Midnight by Edmund Cooper Cover: Hutchinson, 1958
illustration by Pat Marriott (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1958
Hutchinson & Co.)

Strange Evil
Strange Evil by Jane Gaskell Cover: Hutchinson, 1957 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century
House UK Limited. (c) 1957 Hutchinson & Co.)

Journey into Space
Journey into Space by Charles Chilton Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd., 1954
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Jenkins.
(c) 1954 Jenkins )

Paper Dolls, The
The Paper Dolls by L.P. Davies Cover: Doubleday, 1966 illustration by
Larry Ratzkin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1966 Doubleday & Co.)

Man Who Pulled Down the Sky, The
The Man Who Pulled Down the Sky by John Barnes Cover: Worldwide, 1986
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Worldwide
(c) 1986 Worlwide)

Journal of Nicholas the American
Journal of Nicholas the American by Leigh Kennedy Cover: Jonathan Cape,
1988 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1988 St. Martin's Press )

Maggot, A
A Maggot by John Fowles Cover: Jonathan Cape (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1985 Johnathan
Cape)

Spy with the Blue Kazoo, The
The Spy with the Blue Kazoo by Dagmar (Lou Cameron) Cover: Lancer Books
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Lancer Books (c) 1967 Lancer Books)

Kelwin
Kelwin by Neal Barrett, Jr. Cover: Lancer Books, 1970 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Lancer Books (c) 1970 Lancer)

Woman Who Did, The
The Woman Who Did by Grant Allen Cover: Robert Bros., 1895 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Out of the Silent Planet
Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis Cover: Bodley-Head, 1943 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1943 Bodley - Head)

Herds
Herds by Stephen Goldin Cover: Laser Books, 1975 (First Edition)
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Laser Books (c) 1975 Laser Books)

Mindwipe!
Mindwipe! by Stephen Robinett Cover: Laser Books, 1976 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Laser Books (c) 1976 Laser
Books)

Seeds of Change
Seeds of Change by Thomas F. Monteleone Cover: Laser Books (First
Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh.Laser Books (c) 19
Laser Books)

Skies Discrowned, The
The Skies Discrowned by Tim Powers Cover: Laser Books, 1976 (First
Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh.Laser Books (c) 1976
Laser Books)

Mr. Adam
Mr. Adam by Pat Frank Cover: J.B. Lippincott, 1946 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lippincott (c) 1946 Lippincott)

Journal from Ellipsia
Journal from Ellipsia by Hortense Calisher Cover: Little, Brown & Co.,
1965 illustration by Saul Lambert (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Published by Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c)
1965 Little, Brown and Company (Inc.))

Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, The
The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet by Eleanor Cameron Cover:
Little, Brown & Co., 1954 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Published by Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c) 1954
Little, Brown and Company (Inc.))

Mouse That Roared, The
The Mouse That Roared by Leonard Wibberley Cover: Little, Brown & Co.,
1955 illustration by John Morris (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Published by Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c)
1955 Little, Brown and Company (Inc.))

334
334 by Thomas M. Disch Cover: MacGibbon & Kee, 1972 (First Edition)
illustration by Michael Hasted (M. M. Kavanagh. MacGibbon & Kee (c) 1972
MacGibbon & Kee)

Space Scavengers, The
The Space Scavengers by Cleve Cartmill Cover: Major Books, 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Major Books (c)
1975 Major Books)

Princess of Mars, A
A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs Cover: McClurg, 1917 (First
Edition) illustration by Frank E. Schoonover (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Planet of Peril, The
The Planet of Peril by Otis Adelbert Kline Cover: McClurg, 1929 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
McClurg (c) 1929 McClurg)

Heat Death of the Universe, The
The Heat Death of the Universe by Pamela Zoline Cover: McPherson & Co.,
1988 (First US Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of McPherson & Company.
(c) 1988 McPherson & Co.)

Those Who Can
Those Who Can by Robin Scott Wilson Cover: Mentor (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Mentor (c) 1973 Mentor)

Voyage to Arcturus, A
A Voyage to Arcturus by David Lindsay Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1946
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1946 Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Last and First Men
Last and First Men by Olaf Stapledon Cover: Dover, 1968 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Dover
Publications, Inc. (c) 1968 Dover Publications, Inc.)

Pandora's Planet
Pandora's Planet by Christopher Anvil Cover: DAW Books, 1972 illustration
by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1972 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Woman of the Iron People, A
A Woman of the Iron People by Eleanor Arnason Cover: William Morrow & Co.
, 1991 (First Edition) illustration by Bob Silverman & Gary Buddell (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1991 William Morrow & Co.,
Inc.)

Radix
Radix by A.A. Attanasio Cover: Bantam, 1985 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1985
Bantam Books)

Third Eagle, The
The Third Eagle by R.A. MacAvoy Cover: Doubleday, 1989 illustration by
Jim Burns (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1989 Doubleday)

Monkeys Have No Tails in Zamboanga, The
The Monkeys Have No Tails in Zamboanga by Colonel S.P. Meek Cover:
William Morrow & Co., 1935 illustration by Richard Floethe (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1935 William Morrow & Co.,
Inc.)

Sugar Rain
Sugar Rain by Paul Park Cover: William Morrow & Co. (First Edition)
illustration by Don Maitz (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of William
Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1989 William Morrow & Co., Inc.)

Master of the Moon
Master of the Moon by Patrick Moore Cover: Museum Press, 1952 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Museum Press (c)
1952 Museum Press)

Night Land, The
The Night Land by William Hope Hodgson Cover: Nash, 1912 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Jupiter Project
Jupiter Project by Gregory Benford Cover: Nelson, 1975 (First Edition)
illustration by Don Davis (M. M. Kavanagh. Nelson Publishing (c) 1975
Nelson Publishing Co.)

1925: The Story of a Fatal Peace
1925: The Story of a Fatal Peace by Edgar Wallace Cover: Newnes, 1915
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Time Jumper
Time Jumper by William Greeleaf Cover: Nordon, 1980 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Nordon. (c)
1980 Nordon)

Landscape with Landscape
Landscape with Landscape by Gerald Murnane Cover: Norstilia Press, 1985
(First Edition) illustration by David Wong (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Norstrilia Press (c) 1985
Norstrilia Press)

Omni Best Science Fiction One
Omni Best Science Fiction One ed. by Ellen Datlow Cover: Omni Books
(First Edition) illustration by Michael Parkes (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover
illustration: Michael Parkes / Courtesy of OMNI Magazine. (c) 1992 Omni
Publications International, Ltd.)

Wraeththu
Wraeththu by Storm Constantine Cover: Orb, 1993 illustration by Sam
Rakeland (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1993 Orb)

Ice
Ice by Anna Kavan Cover: Doubleday, 1970 (First US Edition) illustration
by Alan Peckolick (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1970 Doubleday & Co.)

Q: Seeking the Mythical Future
Q: Seeking the Mythical Future by Trevor Hoyle Cover: Panther Books, 1977
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1977 Panther
Books)

Uninhibited, The
The Uninhibited by Dan Morgan Cover: Brown Watson Ltd., 1963 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Brown Watson
Limited (c) 1963 Brown Watson Limited)

Omha Abides
Omha Abides by C.C. MacApp Cover: Paperback Library, 1968 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Paperback Library
(c) 1968 Paperback Library)

Gather, Darkness!
Gather, Darkness! by Fritz Leiber Cover: Pellegrini and Cudahy, 1950
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Pellegrini
and Cudahy (c) 1950 Pellegrini and Cudahy)

Wings Across Time
Wings Across Time by Frank Edward Arnold Cover: Pendulum, 1946 (First
Edition) illustration by Bob Wilkin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Pendulum (c) 1946 Pendulum)

Warchild
Warchild by Richard Bowes Cover: Popular Library, 1986 illustration by
Richard Corben (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1986 Popular
Library)

Shadow Hunter, The
The Shadow Hunter by Pat Murphy Cover: Popular Library (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1982
Popular Library, Inc.)

Venus Equilateral
Venus Equilateral by George O. Smith Cover: Prime Press, 1947 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Prime Press (c)
1947 Prime Press)

Myths, Legends, and True History: Author's Choice Monthly
Myths, Legends, and True History: Author's Choice Monthly by Geoffrey A.
Landis Cover: Pulphouse Publishing (First Edition) illustration by George
Barr (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Pulphouse Publishing. (c) Pulphouse
Publishing Inc.)

Telempath
Telempath by Spider Robinson Cover: Ber/Day, 1976 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Ber/Day (c) 1976
Ber/Day)

Transfigurations
Transfigurations by Michael Bishop Cover: Berkley, 1979 (First Edition)
illustration by Mike Hinge (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1979 The Berkley
Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Strangers
Strangers by Gardner Dozois Cover: Berkley (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1978 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Orbit 9
Orbit 9 ed. by Damon Knight Cover: Putnam (First Edition) illustration by
Paul Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Used with the permission of Damon Knight. (c)
1971 The Putnam Publishing Group. )

Light at the End of the Universe, The
The Light at the End of the Universe by Terry Carr Cover: Pyramid Books,
1976 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1976 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Islands
Islands by Marta Randall Cover: Pyramid Books, 1976 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1976 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Wall Around the World, The
The Wall Around the World by Theodore R. Cogswell Cover: Pyramid Books
(First Edition) illustration by John Schoenherr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1962 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Sturgeon in Orbit
Sturgeon in Orbit by Theodore Sturgeon Cover: Pyramid Books, 1964 (First
Edition) illustration by Ed Emshwiller (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1964 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

I Have No Mouth. . .
I Have No Mouth. . . by Harlan Ellison Cover: Pyramid Books, 1967 (First
Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1967 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Who?
Who? by Algis Budrys Cover: Pyramid Books, 1968 illustration by Kelly
Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 Pyramid Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Laying the Music to Rest
Laying the Music to Rest by Dean Wesley Smith Cover: Popular Library,
1989 illustration by Barclay Shaw (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c)
1989 Popular Library)

Johnny Zed
Johnny Zed by John Gregory Betancourt Cover: Popular Library, 1988 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1988 Popular Library)

Limbo
Limbo by Bernard Wolfe Cover: Ace Books illustration by Jack Gaughan (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1961 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Savoy Dreams
Savoy Dreams by David Britton Cover: Savoy Books, 1984 illustration by
BBC Hulton Picture Library (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Savoy Books (c) 1984 Savoy Books)

Murder in Millennium VI
Murder in Millennium VI by Curme Gray Cover: Shasta,1951 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Erle Melvin Korshak. (c) 1951 Shasta)

Interface
Interface by Mark Adlard Cover: Ace Books (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1977 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Hampdenshire Wonder, The
The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford Cover: Eyre & Spottiswoode,
1948 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Eyre &
Spottis-Woode (c) 1948 Eyre & Spottis-Woode)

Greener than You Think
Greener than You Think by Ward Moore Cover: Sloane, 1947 (First Edition)
illustration by Wolfgang Roth (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Sloane (c) 1947 Sloane)

Tomorrow Revealed
Tomorrow Revealed by John Atkins Cover: Spearman, 1955 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Spearman (c) 1955 Spearman)

Menace from Mercury
Menace from Mercury by Victor La Salle (R.L. Fanthorpe) Cover: John
Spencer & Co., 1954 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Spencer (c) 1954 Spencer [UK])

Vaneglory
Vaneglory by George Turner Cover: Sphere, 1983 (M. M. Kavanagh. Sphere
(c) 1983 Sphere)

New Worlds 5
New Worlds 5 by Michael Moorcock Cover: Sphere Books Ltd., 1973 (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Sphere (c) 1973 Sphere)

Movement of Mountains, The
The Movement of Mountains by Michael Blumlein Cover: St. Martin's Press
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1987
St. Martin's Press)

Ragged World, The
The Ragged World by Judith Moffett Cover: St. Martin's Press (First
Edition) illustration by Ron Walotsky (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover: Ron
Walotsky. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1991 St. Martin's Press)

Out of Space and Time
Out of Space and Time by Clark Ashton Smith Cover: Panther Books, 1974
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1974 Panther
Books)

Twice in Time
Twice in Time by Manly Wade Wellman Cover: Galaxy Publishing Corp., 1958
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Galaxy (c)
1958 Galaxy, No. 3 World Editions, Inc. )

Ralph 124C 41+
Ralph 124C 41+ by Hugo Gernsback Cover: Stratford, 1925 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Stratford (c) 1925
Stratford)

Rosemary's Brain
Rosemary's Brain by Martha Soukup Cover: Wildside Press (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Wildside Press (c) 1992 Wildside Press)

Taking of Satcon Station, The
The Taking of Satcon Station by Jim Baen & Barney Cohen Cover: TOR, 1982
illustration by Howard Chaykin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1982 Tor
Books)

Probe
Probe by Carole Nelson Douglas Cover: TOR, 1985 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor
Books. (c) 1985 Tor Books)

Mirabile
Mirabile by Janet Kagan Cover: TOR, 1991 (First Edition) illustration by
Rich Sternbach (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1981 Tor Books)

Good News from Outer Space
Good News from Outer Space by John Kessel Cover: TOR, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by Cityline Communications (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor
Books. (c) 1989 Tor Books)

Heritage of Flight
Heritage of Flight by Susan Shwartz Cover: TOR, 1989 illustration by
Wayne Barlowe (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1989 Tor Books)

Rainbow Man
Rainbow Man by M.J. Engh Cover: TOR, 1993 illustration by Paul Lehr (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1993 Tor Books)

Human Error
Human Error by Paul Preuss Cover: TOR, 1985 (First Edition) illustration
by Paul Stinson (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c)
1985 Tor Books)

Terrarium
Terrarium by Scott Russell Sanders Cover: TOR (First Edition)
illustration by Angus McKie (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1985 Tor Books)

Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future
Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future by Michael Resnick Cover: TOR (First
Edition) illustration by Michael Whelan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1986 Tor Books)

Iceborn
Iceborn by Paul Carter Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration by Mark
Maxwell (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1989
Tor Books)

Phylum Monsters
Phylum Monsters by Hayford Peirce Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration
by Bruce Jensen (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c)
1989 Tor Books)

Halo
Halo by Tom Maddox Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration by David
Mattingly (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1991
Tor Books)

Price of the Stars, The
The Price of the Stars by Debra Doyle & James D. Macdonald Cover: TOR
(First Edition) illustration by Romas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books)

Jumper
Jumper by Steven Gould Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration by Romas
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books)

Phoenix in Flight
Phoenix in Flight by Sherwood Smith & Dave Trowbridge Cover: TOR, 1993
(First Edition) illustration by Jim Burns (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1993 Tor Books)

Mother of Storms
Mother of Storms by John Barnes Cover: TOR, 1994 (First Edition)
illustration by Bob Eggleton (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1994 Tor Books)

Walkaway Clause, The
The Walkaway Clause by John Dalmas Cover: Tom Doherty Associates/TOR
(First Edition) illustration by Tom Kidd (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1986 Tor Books)

Invasion of 1910, The
The Invasion of 1910 by William Le Queux Cover: Eveleigh Nash, 1906
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Short History of the Future, A
A Short History of the Future by W. Warren Wager Cover: University of
Chicago Press, 1989 illustration by Ted Lacey (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Univ. Chicago (c) 1989 Univ.
Chicago)

Secret Life of Houses, The
The Secret Life of Houses by Scott Bradfield Cover: Unwin Hyman (First
Edition) illustration by Ian Miller (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1988 Unwin Hyman)

Take Back Plenty
Take Back Plenty by Colin Greeland Cover: Unwin Hyman, 1990 (First
Edition) illustration by Steve Crisp (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1990 Unwin Hyman)

Slow Dancing Through Time
Slow Dancing Through Time by Gardner Dozois & Susan Casper Cover: Ursus
(First Edition) illustration by Vern Dufford (M. M. Kavanagh.Ursus
Imprints (c) 1990 Ursus Imprints)

Star Web
Star Web by Joan Cox Cover: Avon Books, 1980 (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) 1980 Avon Books)

Travails of Jane Saint, The
The Travails of Jane Saint by Josephine Saxton Cover: Virgin Books (First
Edition) illustration by Conny Jude (M. M. Kavanagh. Virgin Books (c) 1980
Virgin Books)

Transvection Machine, The
The Transvection Machine by Edward Hoch Cover: Walker & Co. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection. Reprinted with permission of Walker and
Company. (c) 1973 Walker & Company)

Starbrat
Starbrat by John Morressy Cover: Walker & Co., 1972 (First Edition)
illustration by James E. Barry (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of Walker and Company. (c)
1972 Walker & Company)

Hong on the Range
Hong on the Range by William Wu Cover: Walker & Co., 1989 illustration by
Phil Hale & Richard Berry (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of Walker and Company. (c)
1989 Walker & Company)

Plunge into Space, A
A Plunge into Space by Robert Cromie Cover: Frederick Warne, 1890 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Glove of Maiden's Hair, The
The Glove of Maiden's Hair by Michael Jan Friedman Cover: Warner Books,
1987 illustration by James Warhola (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc.
(c) 1987 Warner Books, Inc.)

Story of Ab, The
The Story of Ab by Stanley Waterloo Cover: Way and Williams, 1897
illustration by Wil Bradley (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Last Starship from Earth, The
The Last Starship from Earth by John Boyd Cover: Weybright and Talley,
1968 illustration by Paul Lehr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Weybright and Talley (c) 1968 Weybright and Talley)

Short Account of a Remarkable Aerial Voyage. . ., A
A Short Account of a Remarkable Aerial Voyage. . . by Willem Bilderdijk
Cover: Wilfion Books/UNESCO, 1989 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Wilfion Books/UNESCO (c) 1989 Wilfion Books/UNESCO)

Secret of the Black Planet
Secret of the Black Planet by Milton Lesser Cover: Belmont, 1969 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Belmont
Productions (c) 1969 Belmont Productions)

Trouble on Titan
Trouble on Titan by Alan Nourse Cover: Winston, 1954 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Winston (c)
1954 Winston)

Sinister Barrier
Sinister Barrier by Eric Frank Russell Cover: Dennis Dobson, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Dennis Dobson
Limited (c) 1967 Dennis Dobson Limited)

Intelligence Gigantic, The
The Intelligence Gigantic by John Russell Fearn Cover: World's Work, 1943
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. World's
Work (c) 1943 World's Work)

People Maker, The
The People Maker by Damon Knight Cover: Zenith, 1959 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Zenith (c) 1959 Zenith)

Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike, The
The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike by Philip K. Dick Cover:
Ziesing, 1984 (First Edition) illustration by Dell Harris (M. M. Kavanagh.
Ziesing (c) 1984 Ziesing)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1984 Published by
Mercury Press Cover illustration by R.J. Krupowiczfor (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The Magazine
of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1984 Mercury Press)

Planet Stories
Planet Stories, July 1952 Published by Love Romance Publishing Co., Inc.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1952
Love Romances Publishing Co., Inc.)

Science Fiction Adventures
Science Fiction Adventures, Sept. 1957 Published by Future Publications,
Inc. Cover illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1957 Future Publications, Inc.
)

Startling Stories
Startling Stories, June 1943 Published by Better Publications (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1943 Better
Publications, Inc.)

Strange Adventures
Strange Adventures, Oct.-Nov. 1950 Published by National Comics
Publications, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1950 National Comics Publications, Inc.)

Thrilling Wonder Stories
Thrilling Wonder Stories, Dec. 1949 Published by Better Publications
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Better
Publications, Inc. (c) 1949 Better Publications, Inc.)

Unknown
Unknown, Feb. 1940 Published by Street & Smith Publications (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1940 Street &
Smith)

Sword of Rhiannon, The
The Sword of Rhiannon by Leigh Brackett Cover: T.V. Boardman & Co., 1955
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. T.V.
Boardman & Company (c) 1955 T.V. Boardman & Company)

Venture Science Fiction
Venture Science Fiction, July 1958 Published by Edward L. Ferman Cover
illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Reprinted from The Magazine of Fantasy and
Science Fiction. (c) 1958 Edward L. Ferman)

Weird Tales
Weird Tales, June 1934 Published by Weird Tales Ltd. Cover illustration
by Margaret Brundage (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Weird Tales, Ltd. Copyright 1934
Popular Fiction Publishing Co.)

Twenty-four Hours
Twenty-four Hours by Neil Charles Cover: Curtis Warren Ltd., 1952 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Curtis Warren Ltd.
(c) 1952 Curtis Warren Ltd.)

Lunar Activity
Lunar Activity by Elizabeth Moon Cover: Baen Books, 1990 illustration by
Vincent Di Fate (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1990 Baen Books)

Through Darkest America
Through Darkest America by Neal Barrett, Jr. Cover: Congdon & Weed, 1986
(First Edition) illustration by Joe Burleson (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1986
Congdon & Weed)

Moving Mars
Moving Mars by Greg Bear Cover: TOR, 1993 (First Edition) illustration by
Wayne Barlowe (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c)
1993 Tor Books)

Star Light: The Great Short Fiction of Alfred Bester
Star Light: The Great Short Fiction of Alfred Bester by Alfred Bester
Cover: Berkley, 1977 illustration by Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1977 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Stars My Destination, The
The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester Cover: Bantam, 1970
illustration by Paul Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1970
Bantam Books)

Uplift War, The
The Uplift War by David Brin Cover: Bantam, 1987 illustration by Michael
Whelan (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Vor Game, The
The Vor Game by Lois McMaster Bujold Cover: Baen Books, 1990 illustration
by Tom Kidd (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING
ENTERPRISES. (c) 1990 Baen Books)

Kindred
Kindred by Octavia Estelle Butler Cover: Beacon Press, 1988 illustration
by Joanna Steinkeller & Laurence Shwinger (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1988 Beacon
Press)

Steel Crocodile, The
The Steel Crocodile by D.G. Compton Cover: Ace Books, 1970 (First
Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Man Who Melted, The
The Man Who Melted by Jack Dann Cover: Bluejay Books, 1984 (First
Edition) illustration by Al de Angelo (M. M. Kavanagh. Book jackets
reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books Inc. All rights reserved. (c)
1984 Bluejay Books Inc.)

Triton
Triton by Samuel R. Delany Cover: Bantam, 1976 (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1976 Bantam Books)

Galactic Pot-Healer
Galactic Pot-Healer by Philip K. Dick Cover: Berkley, 1974 illustration
by Paul Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1974 The Berkley Publishing
Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldrich, The
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldrich by Philip K. Dick Cover: Bantam,
1977 (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977 Bantam Books)

Weathermonger, The
The Weathermonger by Peter Dickinson Cover: Delacorte Press, 1986 (First
US Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Delecorte Press, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1986 Delecorte Press)

Start of the End of It All, The
The Start of the End of It All by Carol Emshwiller Cover: Mercury House,
1991 illustration by Renee Flower (M. M. Kavanagh. Published by Mercury
House, San Francisco, CA. (c) 1991 Mercury House)

To Your Scattered Bodies Go
To Your Scattered Bodies Go by Philip Jose Farmer Cover: Berkley, 1971
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 The Berkley Publishing Group.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Rumors of Spring
Rumors of Spring by Richard Grant Cover: Bantam, 1987 (First Edition)
illustration by Gervasio Gallardo (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Hemingway Hoax, The
The Hemingway Hoax by Joe Haldeman Cover: Avon Books, 1991 illustration
by Gary Ruddell (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c)
1991 Avon Books)

Make Room! Make Room!
Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison Cover: Bantam, 1994 illustration
by Mick McGinty (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1994Bantam
Books)

Starship Troopers
Starship Troopers by Robert A. Heinlein Cover: Ace Books, 1987
illustration by James Warhola (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, The
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein Cover: Berkley, 1968
illustration by Paul Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1968 The Berkley
Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Past Through Tomorrow, The
The Past Through Tomorrow by Robert A. Heinlein Cover: Berkley, 1983 (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1983 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Star Beast, The
The Star Beast by Robert A. Heinlein Cover: Ace Books, 1972 illustration
by Steele Savage (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1972 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

White Queen
White Queen by Gwyneth Jones Cover: Orb, 1994 (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted
by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1994 Orb)

Wind's Twelve Quarters, The
The Wind's Twelve Quarters by Ursula K. Le Guin Cover: Bantam, 1976 (M.
M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1976 Bantam Books)

Word for World Is Forest, The
The Word for World Is Forest by Ursula K. Le Guin Cover: Berkley, 1976
illustration by Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1976 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Solaris
Solaris by Stanislaw Lem Cover: Berkley, 1971 illustration by Paul Lehr
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 The Berkley Publishing Group.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Galaxies
Galaxies by Barry Malzberg Cover: Pyramid Books, 1975 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1975 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Memoirs of a Spacewoman
Memoirs of a Spacewoman by Naomi Mitchison Cover: Berkley, 1973
illustration by Vincent Di Fate (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1973 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Mirror for Observers, A
A Mirror for Observers by Edgar Pangborn Cover: Dell, 1980 (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1980 Dell Books)

Glamour, The
The Glamour by Christopher Priest Cover: Doubleday, 1985 (First US
Edition) illustration by Linda Fennimore (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1985 Doubleday)

Red Mars
Red Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson Cover: Bantam, 1993 (First US Edition)
illustration by Don Dixon (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1993
Bantam Books)

Planet on the Table, The
The Planet on the Table by Kim Stanley Robinson Cover: TOR, 1986 (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1986
Tor Books)

Stardance
Stardance by Spider Robinson & Jeanne Robinson Cover: TOR, 1983
illustration by Victoria Poyser (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission
of Tor Books. (c) 1983 Tor Books)

Ragged Astronauts, The
The Ragged Astronauts by Bob Shaw Cover: Baen Books, 1988 illustration by
Alan Gutierrez (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of BAEN
PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1988 Baen Books)

Wreath of Stars, A
A Wreath of Stars by Bob Shaw Cover: Dell, 1978 (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1978 Dell Books)

Illuminatus! Trilogy, The
The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea & Robert Anton Wilson Cover:
Dell, 1984 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1984 Dell Books)

Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Vol. I, The
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Vol. I by Robert Silverberg Cover: Avon
Books, 1971 (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1971
Avon Books)

Hyperion
Hyperion by Dan Simmons Cover: Bantam, 1990 illustration by Gary Ruddell
(M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Bantam Books)

Rediscovery of Man, The
The Rediscovery of Man by Cordwainer Smith Cover: NESFA Press, 1993
(First Edition) illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover
Illustration: Jack Gaughan. (c) 1993 NESFA Press)

Star Maker
Star Maker by Olaf Stapledon Cover: Jeremy P. Tarcher, 1987 illustration
by Tanya Maiboroda (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of the Estate of William Olaf
Stapledon. (c) 1987 Jeremy Tarcher / The Putnam Publishing Group.)

Snow Crash
Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson Cover: Bantam, 1993 illustration by Bruce
Jensen (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1993 Bantam Books)

Schismatrix
Schismatrix by Bruce Sterling Cover: Arbor House, 1995 (First Edition)
illustration by Ron Walotsky (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of
William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) Arbor House)

Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology
Mirrorshades: The Cyberpunk Anthology ed. by Bruce Sterling Cover: Arbor
House, 1986 (First Edition) illustration by Dorothy Wachtenheim & Abbe
Lubell (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc.
(c) 1986 Arbor House)

Gravity's Angels
Gravity's Angels by Michael Swanwick Cover: Arkham House, 1991 (First
Edition) illustration by Pablo Picasso (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Arkham
House Publishers. (c) 1991 by Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Stations of the Tide
Stations of the Tide by Michael Swanwick Cover: William Morrow & Co.,
1991 (First Edition) illustration by Daniel Horn (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1991 William Morrow & Co.,
Inc.)

Of Men and Monsters
Of Men and Monsters by William Tenn Cover: Walker & Co., 1970
illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
Walker and Company. (c) 1970 Walker & Company)

Gate to Women's Country, The
The Gate to Women's Country by Sheri S. Tepper Cover: Bantam, 1989
illustration by Wilson McLean (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1989 Bantam Books)

Her Smoke Rose up Forever
Her Smoke Rose up Forever by James Tiptree Cover: Arkham House, 1990
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Arkham House Publishers. (c)
1990 by Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Weapon Shops of Isher, The
The Weapon Shops of Isher by A.E. Van Vogt Cover: Ace Books, 1970
illustration by John Schoenherr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1970 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Last Castle, The
The Last Castle by Jack Vance Cover: TOR, 1989 illustration by Brian
Waugh (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1989 Tor
Books)

Persistence of Vision, The
The Persistence of Vision by John Varley Cover: Dell, 1979 (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979 Dell Books)

True Names
True Names by Vernor Vinge Cover: Dell, 1981 illustration by Tsui (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1981 Dell Books)

Slaughterhouse-Five
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut Cover: Dell, 1991 illustration by
Carin Goldberg & Gene Greif (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1991
Dell Books)

Night of the Cooters
Night of the Cooters by Howard Waldrop Cover: Ursus, 1990 (First Edition)
illustration by Don Ivan Punchatz (M. M. Kavanagh.Ursus Imprints (c) 1990
Ursus Imprints)

Island of Dr. Moreau, The
The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells Cover: Bantam, 1994 illustration
by Rousseau Le Douanier (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1994
Bantam Books)

This Immortal
This Immortal by Roger Zelazny Cover: Ace Books, 1966 (First Edition)
illustration by Gray Morrow (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1966 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Gods Themselves, The
The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov Cover: Bantam, 1990 illustration by
Don Dixon (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division
of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Bantam Books)

JEM
JEM by Frederik Pohl Cover: Bantam, 1980 (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1980 Bantam Books)

Legion of Time, The
The Legion of Time by Jack Williamson Cover: Pyramid Books, 1967
illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 Pyramid
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Galaxy
Galaxy, Aug. 1958 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1958 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, Jan. 1956 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1956 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, Jan. 1953 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1953 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, May 1957 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1957 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, April 1954 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1954 Galaxy Publishing Corporation)

Galaxy
Galaxy, April 1960 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1960 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, Feb. 1960 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1960 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, Jan. 1952 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1952 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, Feb. 1951 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1951 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

Galaxy
Galaxy, Oct. 1950 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp. (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
Galaxy (R). (c) 1950 Galaxy Publishing Corporation )

If
If, March 1967 Published by Quinn Publishing Co. Inc. Cover illustration
by Ken Fagg (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of Galaxy (R). (c) 1967 Quinn Publishing Co.
Inc.)

If
If, Sept. 1953 Published by Quinn Publishing Co. Inc. Cover illustration
by Ken Fagg (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of Galaxy (R). (c) 1953 Quinn Publishing Co.
Inc.)

Slan
Slan by A.E. Van Vogt Cover: Berkley, 1975 illustration by Paul Lehr (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1975 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Heritage of Hastur, The
The Heritage of Hastur by Marion Zimmer Bradley Cover: DAW Books, 1975
illustration by George Barr & Richard Hescox (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted
with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1975 DAW Books, Inc.)

Million Open Doors, A
A Million Open Doors by John Barnes Cover: TOR, 1992 (First Edition)
illustration by Vincent Di Fate (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission
of Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books)

Unconquered Countries
Unconquered Countries by Geoff Ryman Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1994
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1994
St. Martin's Press)

Time Machine, The
The Time Machine by H.G. Wells Cover: Ace Books, 1988 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1968 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Sandman: Season of Mists, The
The Sandman: Season of Mists by Neil Gaiman Cover: DC Comics, 1992
illustration by Dave McKeon (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by permission of DC
Comics. (TM) & (c) 1992 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.)

Glass Houses
Glass Houses by Laura J. Mixon Cover: TOR, 1992 (First Edition)
illustration by Tom Canty (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor
Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books)

Journal Wired
Journal Wired, Winter 1989 Published by Andy Watson & Mark Uziesieng (M.
M. Kavanagh. (c) Andy Watson and Mark Ziesing)

Nexus
Nexus, April 1991 / No. 1 Published by SF Nexus (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1991
SF Nexus)

Science Fiction Chronicle
Science Fiction Chronicle, Feb. 1992 Published by Andrew I. Porter Cover
illustration by David Cherry (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover: David Cherry.
Courtesy of Andrew I. Porter. Copyright 1992 by Science Fiction Chronicle)

War with the Newts
War with the Newts by Karel Capek Cover: Berkley (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Worlds of Fantasy
Worlds of Fantasy / No. 2 Published by John Spencer & Co. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) John Spencer &
Co.)

Wonder Stories
Wonder Stories, 1957 Published by Better Publications (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Better Publications, Inc.
(c) 1957 Better Publications, Inc.)

Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Feb. 1986 Published by Dell
Magazines (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1986 Dell Magazines)

Hambly, Barbara
Barbara Hambly (1951- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Harrison, Harry
Harry Harrison (1925- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Kelly, James Patrick
James Patrick Kelly (1951- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Haldeman, Joe
Joe Haldeman (1943- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Jablokov, Alexander
Alexander Jablokov (1956- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Kagan, Janet
Janet Kagan (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Kandel, Michael
Michael Kandel (1941- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Kessel, John J.
John J. Kessel (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Kingsbury, Donald
Donald Kingsbury (1929- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Gentle, Mary
Mary Gentle (1956- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Gerrold, David
David Gerrold (1944- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Shepard, Lucius
Lucius Shepard (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Shiner, Lewis
Lewis Shiner (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Silverberg, Robert
Robert Silverberg (1935- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Shwartz, Dr. Susan
Susan M. Shwartz (1949- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Scott, Melissa
Melissa Scott ( ? - ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Schmidt, Stanley
Stanley Schmidt (1944- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Sheffield, Charles
Charles Sheffield (1935- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Saberhagen, Fred
Fred Saberhagen (1930- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Rusch, Kristine Kathryn
Kristine Kathryn Rusch (1960- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Robinson, Spider
Spider Robinson (Paul Robinson, 1948- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C.
Valada)

Rasmussen, Alis (Kate Elliot)
Alis A. Rasmussen (1958- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Reed, Robert
Robert Reed (1956- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Resnick, Michael
Michael D. Resnick (1942- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Pratchett, Terry
Terry Pratchett (1948- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Pournelle, Jerry E.
Jerry E. Pournelle (1933- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Powers, Tim
Tim Powers (1952- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Murphy, Pat
Pat Murphy (1955- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Newman, Kim J.
Kim J. Newman (1959- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Norton, Andre
Andre Norton (1912- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Turtledove, Harry
Harry Turtledove (1949- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Vance, Jack
Jack Vance (1916- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Vinge, Vernor
Vernor Vinge (1944- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

White, James
James White (1928- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Wilhelm, Kate
Kate Wilhelm (1928- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Williams, Walter Jon
Walter Jon Williams (1953- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Williamson, Jack
Jack Williamson (1908- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Niven, Larry
Larry Niven (1938- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Willis, Connie
Connie Willis (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Wu, William F.
William F. Wu (1951- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro (1942- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Yolen, Jane
Jane Yolen (1939- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Zahn, Timothy
Timothy Zahn (1951- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Zelazny, Roger
Roger Zelazny (1937-1995) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Knight, Damon
Damon Knight (1922- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Kress, Nancy
Nancy Kress (1948- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Lafferty, R.A.
R.A. Lafferty (1914- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Leiber, Fritz
Fritz Leiber (1910-1992) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Longyear, Barry
Barry B. Longyear (1942- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Matheson, Richard
Richard Matheson (1926- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

McIntyre, Vonda
Vonda N. McIntyre (1948- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Moorcock, Michael
Michael Moorcock (1939- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Morrow, James
James Morrow (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Stirling, S.M.
S.M. Stirling (1954- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Haldeman II, Jack C.
Jack C. Haldeman II (1941- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Landis, Dr. Geoffrey
Dr. Geoffrey Landis (1955- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Rosenberg, Joel
Joel Rosenberg (1954- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Wolfe, Gene
Gene Wolfe (1931- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Watt-Evans, Lawrence
Lawrence Watt-Evans (1954- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Varley, John
John Varley (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Swanwick, Michael
Michael Swanwick (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Moon, Elizabeth
Elizabeth Moon (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Ing, Dean
Dean Ing (1931- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Hartwell, David G.
David G. Hartwell (1941- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Gaiman, Neil
Neil Gaiman (1960- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Gibson, William
William Gibson (1948- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Greenland, Colin
Colin Greenland (1954- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Gunn, James E.
James E. Gunn (1923- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Harrison, John M.
Harrison, M. John (1945- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) ( Bettmann. )

Hesse, Hermann
Hermann Hesse (1877-1962) ( Bettmann. )

Hogan, James P.
James P. Hogan (1941- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Holland, Cecelia
Cecelia Holland (1943- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Hubbard, L. Ron
L. Ron Hubbard (1911-1986) ( Bettmann. )

Huxley, Aldous
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) ( Bettmann. )

Kerr, Katharine
Katherine Kerr (1944- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Kipling, Rudyard
Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) ( Bettmann. )

Koontz, Dean R.
Dean R. Koontz (1945- ) ( Bettmann. )

Kube-McDowell, Michael P.
Michael P. Kube-McDowell (1954- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Le Guin, Ursula K.
Ursula K. Le Guin (1929- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Lee, Tanith
Tanith Lee (1947- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Lewis, C.S.
C.S. Lewis (1898-1963) ( Bettmann. )

Linaweaver, Brad
Brad Linaweaver (1952- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

London, Jack
Jack London (1876-1916) ( Bettmann. )

Mason, Lisa
Lisa Mason (1953- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

May, Julian
Julian May (1931- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Merril, Judith
Judith Merril (1923- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Orwell, George
George Orwell (1903-1950) ( Bettmann. )

Piercy, Marge
Marge Piercy (1936- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Poe, Edgar Allan
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) ( Bettmann. )

Pohl, Frederik
Frederik Pohl (1919- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Robinson, Frank M.
Frank M. Robinson (1926- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Rushdie, Salman
Salman Rushdie (1947- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Ryman, Geoff
Geoff Ryman (1951- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Shaw, Bob
Bob Shaw (1931- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Steele, Allen
Allen Steele (1958- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Sturgeon, Theodore
Theodore Sturgeon (1918-1985) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Swift, Jonathan
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) ( Bettmann. )

Tepper, Sheri S.
Sheri S. Tepper (1929- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Tolkien, J.R.R.
J.R.R. Tolkien (1902-1980) ( Bettmann. )

Tuttle, Lisa
Lisa Tuttle (1952- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Vidal, Gore
Gore Vidal (1925- ) ( Bettmann. )

Vinge, Joan D.
Joan D. Vinge (1948- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Vonnegut, Jr., Kurt
Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (1922- ) ( Bettmann. )

Wells, H.G.
H.G. Wells (1866-1946) ( Bettmann. )

Goonan, Kathleen Ann
Kathleen Ann Goonan (1952- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Lethem, Jonathan Allen
Jonathan Allen Lethem (1964- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

King, Stephen
Stephen King (1947- ) ( Bettmann. )

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
Illustration from Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. (
Phototheque-Hachette.)

Journey to the Center of the Earth
Illustration from Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth.
Artwork by Riou, engraved by Pannemaker. ( Phototheque-Hachette.)

Journey to the Center of the Earth
Illustration from Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth.
Artwork by Riou, engraved by Pannemaker. ( Phototheque-Hachette.)

Journey to the Center of the Earth
Illustration from Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth.
Artwork by Riou, engraved by Pannemaker. ( Phototheque-Hachette.)

Journey to the Center of the Earth
Illustration from Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth.
Artwork by Riou, engraved by Pannemaker. ( Phototheque-Hachette.)

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
Illustration from Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.
Artwork by De Neuville, engraved by Hildebrand. ( Photothque-Hachette.)

Heinlein, Robert A.
Robert A. Heinlein (1907-1988) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Reynolds, Mack
Mack Reynolds (1917-1983) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Herbert, Frank
Frank Herbert (1920-1986) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

van Vogt, A.E.
A.E. van Vogt (1912- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Verne, Jules
Jules Verne (1828-1905) (Nadar / Photothque-Hachette (c) 1995 Nadar /
Photothque-Hachette)

Gallun, Raymond Z.
Raymond Z. Gallun (1911- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Laumer, Keith
Keith Laumer (1925-1993) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Leinster, Murray
Murray Leinster (1896-1975) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

MacLean, Katherine
Katherine MacLean (1925- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Malzberg, Barry N.
Barry N. Malzberg (1939- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Moore, C.L.
C.L. Moore (1911-1987) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Piper, H. Beam
H. Beam Piper (1904-1964) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Sargent, Pamela
Pamela Sargent (1948- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Simak, Clifford D.
Clifford D. Simak (1904-1988) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Smith, E.E.
E.E. Smith (1890-1965) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Wilson, Richard
Richard Wilson (1920-1987) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Wollheim, Donald A.
Donald A. Wollheim (1914-1990) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Zebrowski, George
George Zebrowski (1945- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Thomson, Amy
Amy Thomson (1958- ) (Steven Smith. (c) 1995 Steven Smith)

McHugh, Maureen F.
Maureen F. McHugh (1959- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Miller, P. Schuyler
P. Schuyler Miller (1912-1974) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Shaara, Michael
Michael Shaara (1929-1988) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Ley, Willy
Willy Ley (1906-1969) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Galouye, Daniel F.
Daniel F. Galouye (1920-1976) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Kuttner, Henry
Henry Kuttner (1914-1958) (From the Archives of the J. Wayne & Elise M.
Gunn Center For The Study of Science Fiction at The University of Kansas.
)

Lovecraft, H.P.
H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937) (From the Archives of the J. Wayne & Elise M.
Gunn Center For The Study of Science Fiction at The University of Kansas.
)

Stapledon, Olaf
Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950) (From the Archives of the J. Wayne & Elise M.
Gunn Center For The Study of Science Fiction at The University of Kansas.
)

Weinbaum, Stanley G.
Stanley G. Weinbaum (1902-1935) (From the Archives of the J. Wayne &
Elise M. Gunn Center For The Study of Science Fiction at The University of
Kansas. )

Gernsback, Hugo
Hugo Gernsback (1884-1967) (From the Archives of the J. Wayne & Elise M.
Gunn Center For The Study of Science Fiction at The University of Kansas.
)

Merritt, A.
A. Merritt (1884-1943) (From the Archives of the J. Wayne & Elise M. Gunn
Center For The Study of Science Fiction at The University of Kansas. )

Gold, Horace L.
Horace L. Gold (1914- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Griffin, Russell M.
Russell M. Griffin (1943-1986) (Courtesy of: Publicity Dept. - University
of Bridgeport. )

Hamilton, Edmond
Edmond Hamilton (1904-1977) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Harris, MacDonald
MacDonald Harris (1921- ) (Barbara Hall. (c) 1995 Barbara Hall)

Keyes, Daniel
Daniel Keyes (1927- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Lupoff, Richard A.
Richard A. Lupoff (1935- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Palmer, David
David Palmer (1941- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Pangborn, Edgar
Edgar Pangborn (1909-1976) (Eliot Rowe. (c) 1995 Eliot Rowe)

Panshin, Alexei
Alexei Panshin (1940- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Preuss, Paul
Paul Preuss (1942- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Reamy, Tom
Tom Reamy (1935-1977) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Sladek, John T.
John T. Sladek (1937- ) (Tom Jackson. (c) 1995 Tom Jackson)

Tenn, William
William Tenn (1920- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Twain, Mark
Mark Twain (1835-1910) ( Bettmann. )

Vonarburg, Elisabeth
Elisabeth Vonarburg (1947- ) (Robert Laliberte. (c) 1995 Robert
Laliberte)

Wilder, Cherry
Cherry Wilder (1930- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Womack, Jack
Jack Womack (1956- ) (Meghan Boody. (c) 1995 Meghan Boody)

King, T. Jackson
T. Jackson King (1948- ) (Teresa Edgerton. (c) 1995 Teresa Edgerton)

Soukup, Martha
Martha Soukup (1959- ) (Fred A. Levy Haskell. (c) 1995 Fred A. Levy
Haskell)

Noon, Jeff
Jeff Noon (1957- ) (Sigrid Estrada. (c) 1995 Sigrid Estrada)

Nicholls, Peter
Peter Nicholls (1939- ) (Ponch Hawkes. (c) 1995 Ponch Hawkes)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Nov. 1963 / Vol. 25, No. 5
Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1963 Mercury Press)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Sept. 1962 / Vol. 23, No. 3
Published Mercury Press Cover illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1962 Mercury Press)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Winter-Spring 1950 / Vol. 1,
No. 2 Published by Mercury Press (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science
Fiction. (c) 1950 Fantasy House Inc.)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1971 / Vol. 40, No. 4
Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1971 Mercury Press)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Jan. 1931 / Vol. 40, No. 1
Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Vaughn Bode (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1971 Mercury Press)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1973 / Vol. 44, No. 4
Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Don Davis (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1973 Mercury Press)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Dec. 1967 / Vol. 33, No. 6
Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1967 Mercury Press)

Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Oct-Nov 1991 / Vol. 81, No.
4-5 Published by Mercury Press Cover illustration by Bryn Barnard (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted from The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. (c) 1991 Mercury Press)

Sawyer, Robert J.
Robert J. Sawyer (1960- ) (Carolyn Clink. (c) 1995 Carolyn Clink)

Sterling, Bruce
Bruce Sterling (1954- ) (Photo provided by author. )

Stith, John E.
John E. Stith (1947- ) (Kavin Tris King. (c) 1995 Kavin Tris King)

Griffith, Nicola
Nicola Griffith (1960- ) (Kelley Eskridge. (c) 1995 Kelley Eskridge)

Gaiman, Neil (SF & History)
Neil Gaiman admits that he researches history on a lazy but continual
basis. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Gaiman, Neil (SF & History)
Neil Gaiman admits that he researches history on a lazy but continual
basis. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Gibson, William (Neuromancer)
William Gibson on Neuromancer. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Gibson, William (Neuromancer)
William Gibson on Neuromancer. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Haldeman, Joe (The Hemingway Hoax)
Joe Haldeman had to study how Hemingway misused metaphors and botched
punctuation in The Hemingway Hoax. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing,
Inc.)

Haldeman, Joe (The Hemingway Hoax)
Joe Haldeman had to study how Hemingway misused metaphors and botched
punctuation in The Hemingway Hoax. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing,
Inc.)

Jones, Gwyneth (Divine Endurance)
Gwyneth Jones talks about the Key to the Universe. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Jones, Gwyneth (Divine Endurance)
Gwyneth Jones talks about the Key to the Universe. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Kress, Nancy (On Using Language to Invoke the Future)
Nancy Kress says that the future will feel so strange that writers will
not need to invent jargon to describe it. ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Kress, Nancy (On Using Language to Invoke the Future)
Nancy Kress says that the future will feel so strange that writers will
not need to invent jargon to describe it. ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Le Guin, Ursula K. (On Computers)
Ursula K. Le Guin has no deep thoughts about computer technology. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Le Guin, Ursula K. (On Computers)
Ursula K. Le Guin has no deep thoughts about computer technology. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

McHugh, Maureen (China Mountain Zhang)
Maureen McHugh discusses China Mountain Zhang and her perception of what
it may be like to like in a third world country of the future. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

McHugh, Maureen (China Mountain Zhang)
Maureen McHugh discusses China Mountain Zhang and her perception of what
it may be like to like in a third world country of the future. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Martin, George R. R. (On the Promise of SF)
George R. R. Martin would like to see the fictions of SF become real in
his lifetime. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Martin, George R. R. (On the Promise of SF)
George R. R. Martin would like to see the fictions of SF become real in
his lifetime. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Moorcock, Michael (On Alienation)
Michael Moorcock thinks that it's easy for SF writers to describe
outsiders, since most authors are alienated themselves. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Moorcock, Michael (On Alienation)
Michael Moorcock thinks that it's easy for SF writers to describe
outsiders, since most authors are alienated themselves. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Morrow, James (This is the Way the World Ends)
James Morrow cites children as an inspiration in working for disarmament.
( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Morrow, James (This is the Way the World Ends)
James Morrow cites children as an inspiration in working for disarmament.
( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Niven, Larry (On Telepathy)
Larry Niven thinks that it's a good thing that we can't read minds. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Niven, Larry (On Telepathy)
Larry Niven thinks that it's a good thing that we can't read minds. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Pohl, Frederik (Aliens in JEM)
Frederik Pohl makes admits to making up his descriptions of aliens as he
goes along. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Pohl, Frederik (Aliens in JEM)
Frederik Pohl makes admits to making up his descriptions of aliens as he
goes along. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Robinson, Kim Stanley (On Dreams)
Kim Stanley Robinson believes that dreams have power in our lives even if
we can't remember them. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Robinson, Kim Stanley (On Dreams)
Kim Stanley Robinson believes that dreams have power in our lives even if
we can't remember them. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Ryman, Geoffrey (The Child Garden)
Geoffrey Ryman discusses his book, The Child Garden, the lack of the
spiritual element in our lives. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Ryman, Geoffrey (The Child Garden)
Geoffrey Ryman discusses his book, The Child Garden, the lack of the
spiritual element in our lives. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Silverberg, Robert (The Immensity of the Universe)
Robert Silverberg on the smallness of Us and the immensity of It. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Silverberg, Robert (The Immensity of the Universe)
Robert Silverberg on the smallness of Us and the immensity of It. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Simmons, Dan (Hyperion)
Dan Simmons on his book, Hyperion, and on John Keats. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Simmons, Dan (Hyperion)
Dan Simmons on his book, Hyperion, and on John Keats. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Sterling, Bruce (On Television)
Bruce Sterling is definitely plugged in ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Sterling, Bruce (On Television)
Bruce Sterling is definitely plugged in ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Stephenson, Neal (Future Virus)
Neal Stephenson on viruses; when you just can't get that tune out of your
head. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Stephenson, Neal (Future Virus)
Neal Stephenson on viruses; when you just can't get that tune out of your
head. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Swanwick, Michael (Transcendence)
Michael Swanwick on reaching an audience through the power of mystery. (
(c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Swanwick, Michael (Transcendence)
Michael Swanwick on reaching an audience through the power of mystery. (
(c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Vonarburg, Elisabeth (Writing for SF Fans)
Elisabeth Vonarburg talks about her audience and herself. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Vonarburg, Elisabeth (Writing for SF Fans)
Elisabeth Vonarburg talks about her audience and herself. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

On Being a Science Fiction Writer
There are better ways of becoming a millionaire than by writing science
fiction, according to those who know. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing,
Inc.)

What Science Fiction Does or Should Do
Other than providing a good read, SF writers hopefully see their novels
helping people deal with future change and exposing them to new horizons.
( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Women in Science Fiction
Various views: Women of SF and Women in SF. ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Powers of the Mind
James Morrow and Geoff Ryman make a case for the power of skepticism and
reject the simplicity of New Age answers. ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

The Outlaw in Cyberpunk
The romance of the life of the outlaw has long been a theme in books and
movies. These SF writers agree that we can learn something about how our
society functions by those who don't follow the rules. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Virtual Reality
For some people, virtual reality is a term that has little to do with how
we live. For others, the future is already here - or just a phone call
away. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Space Technology
What interests SF writers is not the spaceship but what the spaceship
adds to the story and to the reader's flights of imagination. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Post Apocalypse
It's been a theme since antiquity - the End of the World, Post-Holocaust,
Planetary Disaster. Whether the result of bombs, plagues, or cosmic
explosions, SF writers have long imagined whether our world will end with
a bang or a whimper. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

The Time Machine
Robert Silverberg discusses the man who inspired and touched many
generations of SF fans: H.G. Wells. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing,
Inc.)

Time Travel
SF writers discuss the challenges of Time Travel and agree that it's not
the mechanics but the metaphors that have meaning. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Jones, Gwyneth
Gwyneth Jones (1952- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Kornbluth , Cyril M.
Cyril M. Kornbluth (1923-1958) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Langford, David
David Langford (1953- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Lem, Stanislaw
Stanislaw Lem (1921- ) (Franz Rottensteiner. (c) 1995 Franz
Rottensteiner)

L'Engle, Madeleine
Madeleine L'Engle (1918- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

MacDonald, James D.
James D. MacDonald (1916-1986) (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1995 M. M. Kavanagh)

Popkes, Steven
Steven Popkes (1952- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Rodgers, Alan
Alan Rodgers ( ? - ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Sanders, Scott Russell
Scott Russell Sanders (1945- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Spruill, Steven
Steven G. Spruill (1946- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Stableford, Brian M.
Brian M. Stableford (1948- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Watson, Ian
Ian Watson (1943- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Webb, Sharon
Sharon Webb (1936- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Ransom, Bill
Bill Ransom (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

ab Hugh, Dafydd
Dafydd ab Hugh (1960- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

MacIntyre, F. Gwynplaine
F. Gwynplaine MacIntyre (?1948- ) (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1995 M. M.
Kavanagh)

Roessner, Michaela
Michaela Roessner (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Scarborough, Elizabeth Ann
Elizabeth Ann Scarborough (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Robinson, Kim Stanley
Kim Stanley Robinson (1952- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Nourse, Alan E.
Alan E. Nourse (1928-1992) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Simmons, Dan
Dan Simmons (1948- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Long, Frank Belknap
Frank Belknap Long (1903- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Pike, Christopher
Christopher Pike ( ? - ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Turner, George
George Turner (1916- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Rotsler, William
William Rotsler (1926- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Wolverton, Dave
Dave Wolverton (1957- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Wellman, Manly Wade
Manly Wade Wellman (1903-1986) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Goulart, Ronald
Ronald Goulart (1933- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Wilson, F. Paul
F. Paul Wilson (1946- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Nelson, Ray
Ray Nelson (1931- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Zindell, David
David Zindell (1952- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Hoffman, Lee
Lee Hoffman (1932- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Martin, George R.R.
George R.R. Martin (1948- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

The Blob
One of the relatively few 1950s monster movies to feature a villain that
is something other than a giant vermin or an awakened prehistoric
creature, The Blob (Tonylyn/Paramount) offers an amorphous protoplasmic
mass. Its success suggests that formless threats can be as frightening as
gigantic pests. (Courtesy of Jack H. Harris. (c) Jack H. Harris)

Grant, Richard
Richard Grant (1952- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Hoban, Russell
Russell Hoban (1925- ) (Jerry Bauer. (c) 1995 Jerry Bauer)

Holdstock, Robert P.
Robert P. Holdstock (1948- ) (Dick Jude. (c) 1995 Dick Jude)

Kennedy, Leigh
Leigh Kennedy (1951- ) (Dave Holmes. (c) 1995 Dave Holmes)

McAuley, Paul J.
Paul J. McAuley (1955- ) (Freda Warrington. (c) 1995 Freda Warrington)

O'Donnell, Kevin Jr.
Kevin O'Donnell, Jr. (1950- ) (T. Jackson King. (c) 1995 T. Jackson King)

Priest, Christopher
Christopher Priest (1943- ) (Dick Jude. (c) 1995 Dick Jude)

Rucker, Rudy
Rudy Rucker (1946- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Russell, Eric Frank
Eric Frank Russell (1905-1978) (Harold Gottliffe. (c) 1995 Harold
Gottliffe)

Russ, Joanna
Joanna Russ (1937- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Saxton, Josephine
Josephine Saxton (1935- ) (Dick Jude. (c) 1995 Dick Jude)

Sheckley, Robert
Robert Sheckley (1928- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Shirley, John
John Shirley (1954- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Tiptree, Jr., James
James Tiptree, Jr. (1915-1987) (James Reber. (c) 1995 James Reber)

Waldrop, Howard
Howard Waldrop (1946- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Wilson, Robert Anton
Robert Anton Wilson (1932- ) (Gamma. (c) 1995 Gamma)

Wingrove, David
David Wingrove (1954- ) (Colin Ramsey. (c) 1995 Colin Ramsay)

2001: A Space Odyssey
This Polish poster of 2001: A Space Odyssey(MGM, 1968) reflects the
nature of Poland's celebrated poster art, which emphasizes design
qualities rather than merely illustrating a movie. As in other Eastern
European SF art, this poster suggests the themes of consciousness and
"inner space" rather than space flight. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie
Posters. )

The Amazing Colossal Man
One of many 1950s films that dramatized gigantic mutations as a result of
atomic testing, Bert I. Gordon's The Amazing Colossal Man (Malibu/AIP,
1957) combined the story of an innocent, if massive, young man with
special effects that were noted for their tackiness. His lack of success
did not prevent Allied Artists from making Attack of the 50-Foot Woman the
following year. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Conquest of Space
One of a small number of 1950s films to seek respectability through
claims of scientific authenticity, Byron Haskin's The Conquest of Space
(Paramount, 1955) strove, like George Pal's early and more successful
Destination Moon, to seem as much anticipatory documentary as fiction.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Creature From the Black Lagoon
Most 1950s monster movies were at the same stage of sophistication as the
1930s pulp magazines: the monsters were primarily interested in our women.
Other than that cliche,The Creature From the Black Lagoon (Universal,
1954) is a vivid and enjoyable film, with an archetypal and graceful
amphibious Creature. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Day the Earth Stood Still
While most 1950s science fiction movies saw aliens and monsters as
threats to be destroyed, The Day the Earth Stood Still (20th Century Fox,
1951) made a plea for an end to mankind's violent ways. This theme would
become popular in SF cinema some twenty years later. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

I Married A Monster From Outer Space
While most 1950s invasion movies showed monsters on the rampage, several
explored the theme of the covert invasion, which had obvious affinities
with the Red Scare. Gene Fowler's I Married A Monster From Outer Space
(Paramount, 1958) enjoyably exploits the chills implicit in the theme of
the Enemy Among Us, with a sexual subtext to heighten the effect. (Ronald
V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Incredible Shrinking Man
Jack Arnold's film of The Incredible Shrinking Man (Universal, 1957) was
based on Richard Matheson's script of his novel, The Shrinking Man, and it
boasts both an intelligent script and excellent special effects. Save for
its enabling device - the substance which starts the protagonist's
uncontrollable shrinking is a radioactive cloud - the film eschews most of
the political touchstones that characterize 1950s SF movies and focuses
instead on the theme of Man against Nature. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood
Movie Posters. )

Invaders From Mars
William Cameron Menzies's Invaders From Mars (National Pictures/20
Century-Fox, 1953) makes strong use of the popular 1950s theme of a
takeover by alien invaders. As in the later Invasion of the Body
Snatchers, there is an ending with a twist. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood
Movie Posters. )

The Invisible Man
Although the H.G. Wells novel had neither black comedy or gothic chills,
James Whale's film version of The Invisible Man (Universal, 1933) managed
to combine both elements while still being true to Wells's story. The
special effects - especially of the dying invisible man returning to
visibility organ by organ - remain extremely effective. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Island of Lost Souls
With Wells's idealistic Dr. Moreau converted into a sadistic Hollywood
villain, Island of Lost Soulsis not particularly faithful to Wells's
novel, The Island of Dr. Moreau, but it does work well as a generally
perverse and horrific film. The movie was banned in England, which
reportedly delighted Wells. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

It Came From Outer Space
Ray Bradbury's screen treatment forIt Came From Outer Space (Universal,
1953) cleverly inverts the themes of many alien invasion films. The
shape-shifting aliens that crash in the Mojave Desert and begin assuming
the form of local inhabitants pose no threat and merely want to get home.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

King Kong
The appeal of M.C. Cooper's King Kong (RKO, 1933) was immediate and
universal. This French movie poster ("avec Fay Wray") offers the same
Beauty-and-the-Beast thrills that captivated English-speaking audiences.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Lost Horizon
One of the relatively few Hollywood films to deal with the theme of a
lost civilization,Lost Horizon (Columbia, 1937) is a sentimental tale of
happiness found, lost, then regained. The story is essentially a fantasy;
no attempt is made to rationalize the lost city or its secret of
immortality. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Lost World
Best remembered for its novel and largely successful use of model
animation combined with live action, The Lost World (First National, 1925)
was not a memorable film. What remains striking is Willis O'Brien's
pioneering work in stop-motion photography. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood
Movie Posters. )

Metropolis
Fritz Lang's most famous film and the masterpiece of early SF cinema,
Metropolis (UFA, 1926) combines both SF and gothic elements in its vision
of gleaming towers and futuristic spectacle above, and a downtrodden
proletarian underworld below. It remains an impressive film even today.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Mysterious Island
Numerous film versions of Jules Verne's The Mysterious Islandhave been
made, with the 1961 spectacle being merely the best known. This poster is
from a 1929 MGM production, ninety percent of which was filmed in color.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Night of the Living Dead
Night of the Living Dead (Image 10 Productions/Walter Reade-Continental,
1968) is George Romero's electrifying low-budget film of the dead who
returned to life to prey upon the living. It partakes more of horror than
of SF proper (its SF rationale is mentioned only in passing and is
risible), but it has had a great effect and influence upon SF and horror
films. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Them!
The first of the giant insect movies, Them! (Warner Brothers, 1954)
borrowed the desert locale of It Came from Outer Space and the device of
atomic test radiation from The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms. The resulting
film became the template for a decade's worth of giant crabs, tarantulas,
and other vermin. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Thing
The first of two film adaptations of John W. Campbell's "Who Goes
There?", Howard Hawks's The Thing (Winchester Pictures/RKO, 1951) does not
exploit the paranoid potential of Campbell's conceit - a shapeshifting
alien that kills and replaces the bodies of his vfictims, prompting
survivors' suspicions that one of them is the monster - but does create an
unusually suspenseful and gripping movie. The 1982 version by John
Carpenter does adopt Campbell's shapeshifting theme. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Things To Come
Menzies's relentlessly high-minded adaptation of H.G. Wells's Things to
Come (London films, 1936) may have lacked drama and complex
characterization, but its special effects and visual tableaux give a real
indication of what SF cinema could do. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie
Posters. )

The Time Machine
George Pal's production of The Time Machine (Galaxy Films/MGM, 1960)
remained faithful to the Victorian milieu of Wells's novel, as his earlier
production of The War of the Worlds had not. Ironically, the earlier film
remains true to the spirit of Wells's story while the visually appealing
tale of Wells's time traveller becomes a typical Hollywood adventure
story. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Wasp Woman
Although this undistinguished Roger Corman film featured a beautiful
woman who grows the head of a wasp, the poster for The Wasp Woman
(Filmgroup/Allied Artists, 1959) portrays a wasp with the head of a woman.
The film may tempt viewers to freely interpret the deep and dark reasons
for this particular creation, but it was probably merely an attempt to
cash in on the success of The Fly. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie
Posters. )

When Worlds Collide
Paramount spent less than a million dollars on When Worlds Collide
(1951), no great sum for an end-of-the-world spectacular. Money for the
project reportedly ran out before the matte painting of the new planet
could be produced. Chesley Bonestell's preliminary artwork was used
instead, and it shows. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Golem
Although the Golem is not a technological creation, its story is
interwoven with some of the same themes as the tale of Frankenstein. The
1920 film The Golem (PAGU-UFA, 1920) seems strongly to foreshadow a scene
from The Bride of Frankenstein. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters.
)

The War of the Worlds
The 1953 film version of H.G. Wells's novel,The War of the Worldsshifted
the invasion site from Victorian England to contemporary Los Angeles, and
it changed the war machines from H.G. Wells's walking tripods to chrome
flying saucers with Fifties-style fins (Paramount, 1953). But this George
Pal film retains the essential excitement of the original novel. As the
poster suggests, the concept of an alien invasion was still novel to movie
audiences. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Lost World
This poster advertising the original release of The Lost World (First
National, 1925) offered the same audience appeal that the 1950s monster
movies did thirty years later, save for the presence of a streetcar
instead of an automobile. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

King Kong
This page from the original pressbook describes the various posters that
theatre owners showing King Kong (RKO, 1933) could purchase for their
lobbies. RKO anticipated the film's enormous success from the outset.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Invisible Man Returns
Neither Director James Whale nor star Claude Rains returned to work on
The Invisible Man Returns (Universal, 1940), the first of many sequels to
the original 1939 classic. Merely "suggested" by H.G. Wells's novel, this
movie bears no direct relation to either the novel or the film version of
The Invisible Man. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Invisible Woman
The Invisible Woman (Universal, 1940) uses the device of invisibility -
no other element remains from H.G. Well's original novel. This light
comedy involves a beautiful model turned invisible by an eccentric
professor, to the intense interest of both her playboy sponsor and an
enterprising gangster. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Batman: The Electrical Brain
Although Batman boasted no superpowers, his adversaries occasionally
wielded science-fiction devices. In The Batman: The Electrical Brain
(Columbia, 1943) the caped crusader matches wits with a prototypical
computer. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Adventures of Captain Marvel
Captain Marvel was a comic book superhero, who bore more than a passing
resemblance to Superman.The Adventures of Captain Marvel (Republic, 1941)
dates from the heyday of Republic movie serials. Although the original
Captain Marvel disappeared with the settlement of a lawsuit in 1953,
numerous subsequent versions, using either the character's name or
attributes, have appeared since. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters.
)

The War of the Worlds
This half-sheet poster for The War of the Worlds (Paramount, 1953) is
more painterly than most movie poster art of that time or since: posters
today generally use stills from the film or highly realistic paintings
made from stills. This is especially the case with SF cinema, where the
prospective audience must be assured that the special effects are
realistic. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Godzilla
AlthoughGodzilla (Toho/Embassy, 1954) is in most respects a conventional
monster movie - its resemblance to The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms is
evident. Godzilla's campiness and kick-down-Tokyo vigor has made him a
familiar, even beloved figure in the movie monster pantheon. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

2001: A Space Odyssey
When it first appeared, Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (MGM,
1968) was the most audacious and visually spectacular SF film ever made.
Many people believe that this is a distinction the film still possesses.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Manchurian Candidate
Released the year before the assassination of President Kennedy, The
Manchurian Candidate (MC/Essex/United Artists, 1962) explores a hothouse
of fevered conspiracy themes that would excite the popular imagination in
the years to come. It is perhaps more popular today than it was upon its
original release. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Les Oiseaux
Alfred Hitchcock's film,The Birds (Universal, 1963) lacks many of the
attributes of science fiction, but its vision of members of an
unthreatening animal species suddenly attacking mankind offers a link
between 1950s monster movies and the revenge-of-Nature movies of the 1970s
and 80s. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

On The Beach
Most 1950s SF films, however cautionary, end in triumph for the
protagonists; On the Beach (United Artists, 1959) was a striking
exception. Its anti-war message was unequivocal. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

A Trip To The Moon
The Man in the Moon gets it right in the eye in Georges Melies's sportive
A Trip to the Moon(Star, 1902), the first feature-length science fiction
film. Melies appropriated his tale from Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, who
were quite earnest about space travel. But Melies seemed unable to take
the idea of travelling to the Moon seriously. (Photofest. )

A Trip To The Moon
Director George's Melies drew his own rendition of the "Les Selenites" in
A Trip to the Moon(Star, 1902). While H.G. Wells's aliens were fearsome
examples of the hive mentality, Melies's were strictly for fun.
(Photofest. )

Star Trek (TV)
Created by Gene Roddenberry, Star Trek was a true phenomenon. Many
reputable SF writers wrote teleplays for the series and many wrote
novelizations. The stars of the series, of course, are the ubiquitous
Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), here in a
scene from the original television series. (Photofest. STAR TREK courtesy
of Paramount Pictures. (c) Paramount Pictures)

Star Trek (TV)
In a scene from the original Star Trekseries, Captain Kirk (William
Shatner) strikes a characteristic pose as Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and a
friend look on. (Photofest. STAR TREK courtesy of Paramount Pictures. (c)
Paramount Pictures)

Star Trek (TV)
Captain Kirk (William Shatner) confronts a vermin problem as his crew
looks on in "The Trouble with Tribbles", one of the most popular episodes
of the original Star Trek television series. (Photofest. STAR TREK
courtesy of Paramount Pictures. (c) Paramount Pictures)

Invisible Man, The
The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells Cover: Bantam, 1993 illustration by Roger
Kastel (M. M. Kavangh. Used by permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1993 Bantam Books)

Invasion of the Body Snatchers
Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter, and King Donovan examine a "pod person" in
the first version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Allied Artists,
1956). Although the film has been interpreted as both right-wing paranoia
about a communist takeover and as left-wing paranoia about McCarthyism,
the theme is loss of individual identity and feeling. It remains one of
the most popular B movies of the 1950s. (The Everett Collection, Inc.
Courtesy of Republic Entertainment Inc. (c) Republic Entertainment, Inc.)

Solaris
Andrei Tarkovsky's adaptation of Stanislaw Lem's Solaris (Mosfilm, 1971)
has, like Lem's novels, received less attention in the English-speaking SF
world than in Europe. Its brooding tone and metaphysical themes set it
apart from most Hollywood SF films. (The Everett Collection, Inc. Courtesy
of Corinth Films Inc. (c) Corinth Films Inc. )

Robocop
Paul Verhoeven's stylish and violent Robocop (Orion, 1987) seemed at once
exploitative and satirical of its high-impact Grand Guignol. Like The
Terminator before it and films like Predator 2 afterward, Robocop explores
what proved a popular theme of high-tech urban mayhem. ( Artwork (c) Orion
Pictures Corporation.)

Mad Max
Mad Max (Mad Max Pty., 1979), George Miller's film debut, made a star of
Mel Gibson. More importantly, it helped create a vogue for films about
resolute individualists who prevail as civilization collapses around them,
a theme that finds an echo in the widespread appeal of survivalist
sentiment today. (The Everett Collection, Inc. Artwork (c) Orion Pictures
Corporation.)

Total Recall
In Total Recall(Carolco, 1990), Director Paul Verhoeven's taste for
intense onscreen violence mixes uneasily with Philip K. Dick's pacifist
whimsy. The film supposedly cost more than sixty million dollars, much of
the money obviously spent on special effects. (The Everett Collection,
Inc. Courtesy of Carolco Pictures Inc. (c) 1990 Carolco Pictures Inc. /
Carolco International Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

The Empire Strikes Back
More so even than its predecessor, Star Wars,The Empire Strikes Back
(Lucasfilm/20th Century-Fox, 1980) offers the lush cinematic equivalent of
the space opera of the 1930s pulp magazines. This storyboard image of the
enemy walkers shows another influence: the walking tripods of H.G. Wells's
The War of the Worlds. (COURTESY OF LUCASFILM LTD. Empire Strikes Back
(TM) & (c) Lucasfilm Ltd. (LFL) 1980. All Rights Reserved.)

Star Wars
George Lucas's blockbuster, Star Wars (20th Century-Fox, 1977) is perhaps
the most influential of all SF films. Its tremendous financial success
convinced film studios and SF publishers that space opera was the way to
go. (COURTESY OF LUCASFILM LTD. Star Wars (TM) & (c) Lucasfilm Ltd. (LFL)
1977. All Rights Reserved.)

Terminator 2: Judgment Day
The Terminator and Terminator 2: Judgment Dayboth vividly dramatize the
problems of that famous cyborg, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Both films are
action thrillers, the latter probably the most expensive film ever made.
(Courtesy of Carolco Pictures Inc. Terminator (TM) 2 : Judgement Day (c)
1992 Carolco Pictures Inc. / Carolco International Inc. All Rights
Reserved.)

The Day of the Triffids
The Day of the Triffids (Security Pictures/Allied Artists, 1963) is
typical of the British disaster story: a tale of ordinary folk coping with
an unearthly calamity by behaving sensibly. The scenes of the monstrous
triffids on the attack, however, recall the more florid monster movies of
Hollywood. (Courtesy of Impact Entertainment Inc. (c) Impact Entertainment
Inc.)

The War of the Worlds
Updated Martian war machines attack Los Angeles in The War of the Worlds
(Paramount, 1953), which boasted expensive and superior special effects
quite different from those described in the H.G. Wells novel. Few SF films
of the time were in color, so The War of the Worlds was especially
memorable. (WAR OF THE WORLDS courtesy of Paramount Pictures. (c)
Paramount Pictures)

The Little Shop of Horrors
Roger Corman's ineffably silly The Little Shop of Horrors (1960) is one
of the few monster movies of its day to successfully combine horror and
humor, and it has become a cult classic. ( )

Roddenberry, Gene
Gene Roddenberry (1921-1991) ( Bettmann. )

10,000 Years in a Block of Ice
10,000 Years in a Block of Ice by Louis Boussenard Cover: F. Tennyson
Nealy, 1898 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif. Riverside. )

Infinity's Web
Infinity's Web by Sheila Finch Cover: Bantam, 1985 (Used by permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1985 Bantam Books)

Long Mynd, The
The Long Mynd by Edward P. Hughes Cover: Baen Books, 1985 (Reprinted with
permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1985 Baen Publishing
Enterprises)

Keepers of the People, The
The Keepers of the People by Edgar Jepson Cover: C. Arthur Pearson Ltd.,
1898 ( )

Sunset Warrior, The
The Sunset Warrior by Eric Van Lustbader Cover: Doubleday, 1977 (First
Edition) illustration by John Cayea (Used by permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977
Doubleday Books)

Wonderful Wizard of Oz, The
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum Cover: University of
California Press, 1986 illustration by Barry Moser (Illustrator: Barry
Moser. Used by permission of the artist. (c) 1986 University of California
Press.)

Moore, C.L. and Kuttner, Henry
Left: C.L. Moore (1911-1987) Right: Henry Kuttner (1914-1958) (University
Archives of the University of Southern California. )

Introduction to this Disc
The Multimedia Encyclopedia of Science Fiction brings the visual,
interactive, and navigational powers of CD-ROM technology to what Frank
Herbert called "the most valuable science fiction source book ever
written." The first edition of The Science Fiction Encyclopedia
(Doubleday/Dolphin Books, 1979), edited by Peter Nicholls, was immediately
recognized as the standard single-volume reference in its field and won
the Hugo Award as the best SF nonfiction book of the year. The second
edition, The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (Little, Brown, 1993), edited
by John Clute and Peter Nicholls, represented a major update and vast
expansion of the original work, virtually doubling the amount of
information. The Clute/Nicholls opus was awarded another Hugo Award for
nonfiction.The second edition of ESF provides the foundation and framework
of this CD-ROM. An organic metaphor may be more appropriate than an
architectural one, however, as the original text has taken on qualities of
a growing, breathing life-form. To begin with, the editors have
contributed another major revision of their text. Their work for this
project has included the updating of existing articles for important dates
and developments through 1994 and into 1995, the addition of scores of new
articles on contemporary SF subjects, and the correction of errors brought
to their attention by colleagues and the reading public. The nature and
extent of their revisions are detailed in the "Authors’ Introduction to
the CD-ROM Edition."The animate quality of the text lies also in the
extensive network of cross-references, "see also" citations, and other
editorial conventions that interconnect the entire body of information.
The application of database and hyperlinking technologies enables the user
to circulate among the articles with the click of a mouse. The ease and
speed of accessing related information makes it possible to research a
subject, follow one’s curiosity, or just plain browse as never before
possible. Combining a thorough and elegantly constructed body of knowledge
with the power of computer technology brings science fiction to life, we
think, in a kind of Frankensteinian marvel.Adding sound, pictures, and
video was like endowing the creature with human senses. The subject matter
itself presented an endlessly tantalizing range of possibilities-far
greater than time, disc space, or some rights holders would allow. As a
kind of guiding principle, it was decided that the multimedia content of
the disc should do justice to the richness, variety, and true-fan spirit
of the original Clute/ Nicholls work. The result, we think, is an
encyclopedic collection of book, magazine, and fanzine covers (over
1,500); author portraits (over 350); movie stills and posters; vintage
Hollywood "trailers"; and videotaped interviews with top SF writers. Every
piece of photography, sound, and video is linked to related encyclopedia
articles for direct access, and they are all collected for leisurely
browsing in the Gallery feature.Yet another vital organ of this multimedia
creature comes in the form of book synopses-critical summaries of more
than 300 science fiction classics, from The War of the Worlds to The
Martian Chronicles and Red Mars-as they appear in Anatomy of Wonder (R.R.
Bowker, 5th ed., 1995), another work once nominated for a Hugo Award. The
synopses are made available by special arrangement with the publisher.For
the creators of this disc, database technologies presented a further
opportunity: to organize all the text and multimedia material in some
sensible, navigable, compelling way. The question, really, was how to
"organize" science fiction-a notion anathema to SF and its fans, perhaps,
but an exercise vital to the creation of a quality CD-ROM. The answer, of
course, was multifaceted. Science fiction and its media artifacts can be
catalogued any number of ways, several of which are made operational in
this disc: alphabetical, thematic, chronological, and by media type. From
the opening screen graphic, the user has access to several navigational
modes and content constructions:Archives-The Archives mode enables the
user to access the core content of the encyclopedia-more than 6,000
articles and cross-references (with associated media)-quickly and easily.
By selecting"All Articles" from the Info Region, the user is presented
with a complete list of articles in alphabetical order. Scrolling to the
desired article, highlighting it, and clicking the mouse button will call
up the article and present it on the screen.Other categories in the
Archives enable the user to narrow their search or browse in five major
article groupings. (These represent a clustering of the 12 categories
identified by Clute and Nicholls in "Notes on Content,"). The five,
broadly defined categories contain articles on the following
subjects:Authors-writers, editors, bibliographers, poets, critics,
screenwriters, and the pseudonyms;Themes & Terms-the common themes, genres
and subgenres, and lexicon ofSF, from "Absurdist SF" to "Zombies";Films &
TV-movies, television shows, radio programs, film-makers,
directors,producers, and special-effects creators;Publications &
Art-magazines, books and book series, anthologies, fanzines, comics,
games, fictional characters, illustrators, animators,and theater and set
designers;SF Community-book and magazine publishers (companies and
individuals),scientists and scholars, awards and contests, game companies,
writers’ groups, SF in other countries, book and paraphernaliacollections,
clubs and associations, and other random subjects.Themes-The Themes mode
provides direct access to, and a sub-classification of, the more than 200
theme articles (and related media) described above. All theme articles are
classified in at least one of the five following "superthemes": Time,
Space, Life Forms, Science & Technology, and About SF. For example, the
articles on "Aliens" and "Cyborgs" can be accessed by clicking on Life
Forms; "Worm Holes" and "Neutron Stars" by clicking on Space; and "Women
SF Writers" and "Comics" by clicking on About SF. In addition, each of the
five major categories is introduced by a special "Theme Video" and
includes video presentations of conversations with top SF writers about
related subjects.Time Machine-The Time Machine is a graphic timeline of
science fiction, highlighting landmark events in the history of the genre.
Literary, cinematic, and other classic works are shown in chronological
context, with contemporaneous events in world politics and technology.
Also embedded in the Time Machine are short audio-anecdotes about science
fiction through the decades-the personalities, behind-the-scenes tales,
and social influences that have helped create the unique folklore of
SF.Book Browser-The Book Browser brings together more than 300 summaries
of SF literary classics. Included with each summary are basic information
about the work-such as the author, publisher, and copyright date-and a
synopsis of the story and its major themes. Directly accessible from many
of the summaries are a photo of the book cover and, in some cases, a taped
interview with the author or an author photo portrait.Gallery-The Gallery
is a fully indexed, easily searched collection of all the pictures,
sounds, and video available on the disc. Selecting "All Media" from the
control panel will present an alphabetical list of the complete offerings.
To narrow the search (or browsing session), the user can select "Author
Sound Bites," "Author Videos," "Books/Magazines,"" Movie Clips & Stills,"
"Portraits," or "Theme Videos."The various methods of classifying articles
and media are admittedly arbitrary in design and execution. Defining
"superthemes" and pigeon-holing theme articles both require subjective
judgments with which thoughtful readers inevitably will disagree. The true
science fiction fan may also disagree, just as frequently and just as
strongly, with the inclusion of some media materials and the omission of
others. Even the written and verbal content of this "encyclopedia" should
not be mistaken as objective in character or intent. The articles, book
synopses, and taped interviews may incur the wrath of SF readers for their
critical judgments and interpretive assumptions no less than any other
materials.The mad Frankensteins of this disc not only recognize the
controversial character of their work, they embrace it. They loose their
creation upon the SF community, fanatics and neophytes alike, with every
expectation-indeed every hope-that it may spark a powerful response,
whether love or rage. It may lurch and heave, but we think... it’s alive!
Let us know what you think.

Intro to the CD-ROM Edition
This CD-ROM edition of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction differs from
the 1993 book text in two ways. 1) We have corrected all the 1993 errors
which we have ourselves discovered, or which have been brought to our
attention through the ongoing conversation we have been privileged to
conduct with scores - more like hundreds - of correspondents and
colleagues. We have also added information such as dates where we had
missed them, or where they had not previously been brought to light. 2) We
have updated the body of the work from mid-1992 to approximately the end
of 1994 (a few important 1995 dates and items have been admitted as well).
There are approximately 25,000 words of new entries, ranging over the
entire range of the book; and (we can only make a guess at this point, as
these new words have been woven into the texture of the existing book)
perhaps as many words again added to update previous entries. The areas of
the book in which the updates are concentrated are Authors, Awards, Films,
Magazines, Television and some Themes. As the 1993 book edition was
probably closer to 1,350,000 words than the 1,300,000 we calculated
hurriedly at the time, this brings the total length of the book to around
1,400,000 words.A book like this can only be truly and happily successful
if it is understood to be part of this ongoing conversation about the
field. Our debts to all those who have taken part in this conversation are
as before; only larger. We would like, too, to thank all those who voted
for us in the many awards, including the Hugo, which the 1993 book edition
won.We intend to continue revising and updating our sf data with future
editions. As before, so now, we deeply appreciate all the help we can get.
Letters can, of course, be sent via our publishers; or suggestions and
corrections about author entries can be sent directly to John Clute, 221
Camden High Street, London NW1 7BU, England, and about all other entries
to Peter Nicholls, 26A Wandsworth Road, Surrey Hills, Victoria 3127,
Australia.John Clute and Peter Nicholls, May 1995

Notes on Content
From The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, John Clute and Peter Nicholls,
eds.In the book editions of this encyclopedia we laid out frankly what was
included and what we had chosen to leave out. Let us do so again, by
examining one at a time the various subcategories (authors, themes,
magazines, films, etc.) into which, for administrative purposes, we have
normally divided the work when discussing its structure.1. Authors In the
beginning it seemed very simple. In late 1976, as the first edition of
this encyclopedia began to take shape, we decided that we would give an
individual entry to any writer who published a book of sf in English
before the beginning of 1978, as well as entries to some authors who had
never published a book of their own. We had no idea how huge a task we had
taken on, though it did not take us more than a couple of months to
discover that our goals were unattainable.Very soon we decided that, even
with English-language book authors, we would have to exercise some
discretion. We would have to exclude some authors of genre sf who seemed
to have made no impact on the field in general; generally speaking these
authors had published only one book and were not expected to publish any
more (we did not treat authors who had only recently published a first
book as one-book authors in this sense). And we would exercise a similar
(though less easily defined) control over non-genre sf authors as well,
especially those who wrote prior to the 20th century.Genre sf, by
definition, had reasonably distinct boundaries, and we were able to be
pretty sure (errors aside) that we had covered the territory. Non-genre sf
was, however, another matter. Because many of the research aids we now
take for granted had not yet been published in the mid-1970s, we only
slowly discovered the hugeness of the world of non-genre sf, and how
remarkably difficult it was going to be to know when to stop looking for
authors who merited inclusion. In fact we never did stop finding
previously unsuspected sf books of interest by non-genre writers, and we
probably never will. By the time we ceased adding entries to the first
edition, we found that we had given as many entries to non-genre writers
as to genre ones, although our central focus on genre sf meant of course
that we paid far more attention to writers like Isaac Asimov and Robert A.
Heinlein than to literary figures (some major, like Vladimir Nabokov) who
made occasional use of sf devices. In the end, taking Authors, Editors and
Critics together, we had a total of 1817 entries on individual writers in
the 1979 edition.For the second 1993 edition we eliminated about 50 of
these writers, on several grounds, all of which apply also to more recent
candidates for inclusion:1. Because of the increasingly book-oriented
nature of written sf, we with reluctance decided not to give entries to
writers who have not yet published a book of their own; individual stories
by these writers will of course be referred to in the relevant Theme
entries.2. Some fantasy writers, we have come to feel, did not in fact
have enough impact on the sf world to warrant an entry.3. We no longer
knowingly include writers whose books have been solely published by vanity
presses.4. We no longer give individual entries to authors none of whose
books in other languages have been translated into English (these authors
are of course treated in Country entries.5. We eliminated a few routine
one-book authors.Having by these means reduced the total to below 1800, we
then added more than 1100 new entries to the 1993 book edition. The new
total of Author entries was 2900+.Some of the new entries are devoted to
authors we missed the first time around: some were culpably omitted, and
some were authors neither we (nor anybody else then in print) had known
were responsible for sf books, but most were authors of works in subgenres
associated with sf, which we now cover more thoroughly (see below).
However, more than half of the new entries are devoted to authors who
published their first book after the beginning of 1978. Some writers whose
impact has been negligible have been excluded deliberately, just as in
1979; and almost certainly there will be others who have been excluded in
error. And we have had some new things to think about, too. There has been
a huge growth, for instance, in ties of all sorts, including a large
number of shared-world productions. We have excluded very few sf authors
who have solely written books tied to shared-world endeavours (like STAR
WARS or STAR TREK), but we have excluded some authors solely of books tied
(for instance) to films (novelizations), to fantasy role-playing games and
also choose-your-own-plot format game books. Although we do not feel it
desirable (or possible) to give an entry to every writer of sf for
children, we are now much more inclusive in our coverage, leaving out
mainly (it is an area extremely difficult to define) authors of sf written
specifically for younger children. Finally, although the number of entries
for non-genre sf writers has grown very considerably, we remain very
conscious of the impossibility of definitively covering an area whose
boundaries cannot be defined (but see below for genres and subgenres
which, although affiliated to sf, are not sf as we understand the term).
These caveats and exclusions are, we recognize, numerous enough to give us
considerable latitude in our selection of authors to include or leave out.
Within these terms, however, we have attempted to give an individual entry
to every writer who has published an (inarguably) sf book in English - or
had one translated into English - before the beginning of 1992.In
selecting fantasy and supernatural-horror authors for inclusion, we have
attempted to restrict our coverage to those authors whose works have had
some significant influence on the complex webs that bind the three genres
together, or whose work contains many elements of rationalized fantasy or
horror. In the first category, it is obvious that, the earlier a writer
is, the more likely it will be that his or her work has had time to affect
the world (and the genres) around him; and we have therefore given entries
to writers like Algernon BLACKWOOD, James Branch CABELL, Lord DUNSANY,
E.R. EDDISON, Robert E. HOWARD, H.P. LOVECRAFT, George MacDONALD and
J.R.R. TOLKIEN.The second category is infinitely debatable, and it is here
that subjective judgements have had to come into play. Much fantasy and
horror makes use of idea-clusters (or tropes or motifs) that are also
fundamental to sf. The four most important are perhaps ALTERNATE WORLDS,
MONSTERS, PSI POWERS, and TIME TRAVEL. These tropes are commonly used as
magical facilitating devices or threats, but sometimes they are given
sufficient logical cohesion and grounding as to be readable in sf terms;
indeed, MAGIC itself - as often in John W. Campbell's magazine UNKNOWN -
can be treated like this. But we have entered the borderlands, where
nothing can be finally and entirely clear. A particularly common feature
of fantasy (for instance) is time travel accomplished by fantastic means,
as in several tales by the significant children's author E. Nesbit; we do
not regard such books as sf. At the same time we do regard Mark Twain's A
Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889), in which time travel is
also accomplished by fantastic means, as an important sf text. We do not
(for instance) give entries to such exemplary writers of horror fiction as
Clive Barker, Ramsey Campbell, James Herbert, Thomas Ligotti or Peter
Straub, even though we are aware that an occasional sf trope makes its way
into their pages; we do give entries to Charles L. GRANT and Whitley
STRIEBER, though primarily for their post-HOLOCAUST novels. Many popular
fantasy writers, like Craig Shaw Gardner and Robert Jordan, have been left
out; while others, like David GEMMELL and Barbara HAMBLY, have entries
because we judge their work to be sufficiently akin to sf. When we have
erred in making these decisions, we hope that we have done so on the side
of inclusiveness.In our treatment of authors (most of them dating from the
late 19th and early 20th centuries) who specialized in subgenres
associated with the development of genre sf (but not usefully defined as
being themselves early sf), we do not pretend to be comprehensive. We do
not attempt to provide entries for all authors of lost-world novels,
fantastic voyages, prehistoric romances, future-war tales, occultist
stories set on this or other worlds, stories of possession and split
personality, tales of reincarnation and immortality, contes philosophiques
and utopias, especially utopias set in the present day. But the last
decades have seen an enormous increase in the field's understanding of the
intersecting genres that helped shape modern sf, and we now have a much
better idea of the amount and variety of early sf and its siblings. We
have therefore very considerably increased our author coverage in these
areas.In our treatment of authors (most of them writing after WWII) who
make occasional use of sf devices to propel plots set in an undated near
future, we have been highly selective, for most of these books are neither
written nor read as sf, and do not reward any attempt to incorporate them
as sf or sf-ish, though we have given entries to a few (e.g., Ian
Fleming). With political thrillers or satires set in an undated near
future, we have erred on the side of inclusiveness (Alan Drury, for
instance, is given an entry), and do so out of a genuine insecurity as to
the sf nature of some political thought.We regret that several factors
have persuaded us to drop a feature from the first book edition that we
know some found useful: there, we listed all separate, uncollected short
stories (when we could locate them) that belonged to a series, as well as
all the books in the series. We still list all series books, but we no
longer, normally, append uncollected short stories. The main factor is
utility: it is now very uncommon for readers to have ready access to the
sort of magazine collections that would allow them to find these stories;
the shift away from magazine publication towards book publication of
recent work - as well as the extensive republication of worthwhile early
work in book form - also argues against the inclusion of this feature.So
far we have been speaking only about fiction writers. We have been
moderately generous, but not comprehensive, in giving entries to editors
of sf magazines and sf anthologies (and few editors of only one or two
anthologies have been included). More often than not, of course, the issue
of inclusion or exclusion does not arise on this score, because many -
perhaps most - sf editors have also been sf writers.For critics and
scholars and other authors of relevant nonfiction, we have been highly
selective. We divide nonfiction authors into two categories:1. Authors
about sf. The number of books, pamphlets, chapbooks and so on published
about the field is now very large, and authors of only one book about sf
may not receive an entry. Nonetheless, the number of "academic" and
"bibliography" entries is considerable.2. Authors whose ideas have fed so
strongly into sf (for good or ill) that we thought a summary of their work
would be useful to readers. They run all the way from Plato to Erich Von
Daniken, taking in Immanuel Velikovsky and others en route. We are not at
all inclusive about this category. Many writers have been left out, with
no imputation intended as to their stature. If the scientist Stephen W.
Hawking does not appear while the scientist Freeman J. Dyson does, it is
because the latter has given his surname to a concept used widely in
modern sf.Author entries were written mostly by John Clute, some in
collaboration; Peter Nicholls wrote more than a tenth of them, and Brian
Stableford also contributed many major entries. Neither Malcolm Edwards
nor David Pringle had time to rework their numerous 1979 entries (although
the latter was able to revise his J.G. Ballard entry), and these have been
updated by Clute and Stableford. John Eggeling was able to do some
revision work on his entries. E.F. Bleiler and Neil Tringham each supplied
several new entries. Other contributors of one or more author entries to
this work are listed under Checklist of Contributors.2. Themes The theme
entries are the connective tissue of this encyclopedia and constitute a
quarter of its length. Through them it is possible to derive a coherent
sense of the history of sf (itself a theme entry) and of what sf is all
about. We are aware, too, of the usefulness of theme entries to teachers
and academics, who may wish to use sf stories to throw light on
contemporary issues but be at a loss to know which stories or novels would
best be chosen for the task. Together, the theme entries form a very
detailed lexicon of sf's main concerns, its subgenres, the genres to which
it is most closely related, and the terms we use in talking about it.
Entries range from ANTIMATTER and ATLANTIS through CONCEPTUAL
BREAKTHROUGH, DYSTOPIAS and FUTUROLOGY, via NEAR FUTURE and ORIGIN OF MAN
to VENUS, UNDER THE SEA and WEAPONS.The theme entries were a major feature
in the first book edition, and loom even larger in the second book edition
and here. There is no clear distinction between a theme entry and a
terminology entry (see below), but the theme entry is likely to be
substantially longer (most over 1000 words, and some over 3000) and to
give more examples from actual sf texts. However, many common items of sf
terminology (ANDROIDS, ROBOTS, CRYONICS, MATTER TRANSMITTERS, TERRAFORMING
and so on) are so important that they warrant a full theme entry.Since the
first edition we have upgraded some terminology entries to full theme
entries, and reclassified some shorter theme entries as terminology
entries. The upshot is that there is a total of 212 theme entries in all.
Some new entries relate to recent developments in sf: BIG DUMB OBJECTS,
CYBERPUNK, GAMES AND TOYS, GAME WORLDS, GRAPHIC NOVELS, NANOTECHNOLOGY,
SHARED WORLDS, SURVIVALIST FICTION, VIRTUAL REALITY and so on; others
could well have appeared in the first edition had we thought of them: APES
AND CAVEMEN, AWARDS, BALLOONS, CLUB STORIES, GOLEM, HITLER WINS, HOLLOW
EARTH, LIBERTARIAN SF, MONSTER MOVIES, POETRY, RURITANIA, SENSE OF WONDER,
SLEEPER AWAKES, SMALL PRESSES AND LIMITED EDITIONS, SPACE HABITATS and
SUPERHEROES are some of these. Some relate to genre criticism: EDISONADE,
HORROR IN SF, PLANETARY ROMANCE, POCKET UNIVERSE, POSTMODERNISM AND SF,
RECURSIVE SF and TECHNOTHRILLER are the main ones.Brian Stableford has
written 78 theme entries, this being where he has left his profoundest
mark on the work, and revised others; Peter Nicholls has written 71; John
Clute has written 14. Other theme entry authors include Brian W. Aldiss,
Everett Bleiler, Damien Broderick, Professor I.F. Clarke, Robert Frazier,
Neil Gaiman, David Pringle, Tom Shippey, and John Sladek.3. Terminology A
terminology entry is effectively a short theme entry. This edition
contains 65 terminology entries. Most are terms often used in sf, but
sometimes found obscure by new readers, like AI, BEM, CORPSICLE, GAS
GIANT, ION DRIVE, LAGRANGE POINT, PARSEC, RIMWORLD and TELEKINESIS. Some
areterms used in describing sf and associated genres, like BRAID, HEROIC
FANTASY, MAGIC REALISM, OULIPO, ROBINSONADE, SCIENTIFICTION, SCI FI,
SEMIPROZINE, SHARECROP, SLIPSTREAM, SPECULATIVE FICTION, SPLATTER MOVIES
and TIE. There are also entries on certain movements allegedly connected
to sf, such as GENERAL SEMANTICS and SCIENTOLOGY. For a full list of
terminology entries see TERMINOLOGY. Most terminology entries are by Peter
Nicholls, some are by John Clute.4. Science Fiction in Various Countries
It would be redundant to give separate entries for the USA and the UK,
since sf from these areas dominates the encyclopedia. We do, however, give
entries to three other English-speaking countries, Australia, Canada and
New Zealand. The entry for Canada is divided into two sections: one for
English-speaking Canada and one for French-speaking Canada.This area of
the encyclopedia is, relatively, the most expanded from the first edition,
and was perhaps the most difficult to put together. Communications
difficulties with parts of the world in considerable turmoil have left
some entries with an occasional date or translation of title missing. We
retain entries for Benelux and Scandinavia (with Denmark and Finland now
separate entries), but two other portmanteau entries from the first
edition have been broken up, to a degree, into their component nations.
There are no longer entries for "Eastern Europe" and "Spain, Portugal and
South America" but, as the list below shows, some new portmanteau entries
are now included. It should be noted that the Yugoslavia entry was sent to
us in December 1990 before that nation began to split into a group of
smaller states with a Serbian rump still calling itself Yugoslavia. We
decided for ease of reference not even to attempt to divide the Yugoslavia
entry into its component nation-states of Croatia, Slovenia, etc.The full
list of 27 entries is as follows (new entries asterisked): ALBANIA*,
ARABIC SF*, AUSTRALIA, AUSTRIA*, BENELUX (Belgium, Luxembourg,
Netherlands), BLACK AFRICAN SF*, BULGARIA*, CANADA, CHINESE SF*, CZECH AND
SLOVAK SF*, DENMARK*, FINLAND*, FRANCE, GERMANY, HUNGARY*, ISRAEL*, ITALY,
JAPAN, LATIN AMERICAN SF* (primarily Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Mexico), NEW
ZEALAND*, POLAND*, ROMANIA*, RUSSIA, SCANDINAVIA (Sweden and Norway),
SOVIET UNION* (more a note than an entry), SPAIN* and YUGOSLAVIA*. All but
a handful of these have been written by experts from the areas or nations
concerned. We have not attempted to contact scholars from every country.
We apologize to Greece, India and all the many other countries where we
know some sf exists, but where we did not have the necessary contacts to
enable us to codify it. What was approximately 14,000 words in 1979 has
been expanded to around 40,000, close to three times the length. The
Anglo-American readership must be our first concern; they make up the vast
majority of our audience. But we feel that, while we might not have done
full justice to sf in non-English-speaking countries, then at least we
have outlined, on a scale not previously attempted in an English-language
sf reference work, the extraordinary scope of what has now become a truly
international literature.All authors - about 300 of them - who receive
substantive treatment in the Country entries are cross-referred to there
from the rest of the encyclopedia. On the other hand, when a Country entry
mentions authors who are well known in English translation and therefore
have their own entries, their names are given in CAPITALS, referring
readers to those entries, with generally only a brief coverage in the
Country entry. Under France, therefore, there is not much about Jules
Verne, and in Russia not much about the Strugatski brothers.5. Films Our
coverage of films is thorough but not fully comprehensive. Depending on
where you draw the boundaries, there may have been 2000 sf films made.
There are now around 580 film entries. Sf/fantasy/horror film-making, as
readers will know, has become almost the dominant genre in the industry
since at least the time of STAR WARS.Dates of films are difficult to
establish with certainty. Most written sources give the copyright date,
some the date of first release (often a year later), and some appear
simply to guess. An examination of the film itself will give only the
copyright date, and we have where possible given date of first release,
but there are a number of cases, especially with older films, where we
cannot be certain of the category into which the date falls.We have
included representative films from the fringes of sf, such as near-future
thrillers about, for example, a presidential assassination or a
technological breakthrough. By far the most important of the fringe
subgenres is the rationalize horror film or monster movie (there are many
in this CD-ROM) where the monster is provided with a scientific
explanation, and, more importantly (as in the case of George A. Romero's
zombie films), where the apparently supernatural threat is regarded with a
sciencefictional eye. (Can you train zombies? Do they have a society? What
will their presence do to existing society?)We count made-for-tv films as
film entries rather than tv entries, in part because many US films made
for tv have been given theatrical release abroad. Also (like ordinary
theatrical movies) many are available on videotape, and not distinguished
in the video shop from ordinary movies. There may be some apparent
inconsistencies here, because we count tv miniseries as tv series rather
than films, even though versions of miniseries - THE STAND,for example -
sometimes turn up on videotape or on tv as if they were single films.
Made-for-tv films are identified as such throughout. Because their
standard is on average lower than that of theatrical films, we do not
attempt in this area the same level of comprehensiveness.A word about
omissions: most (but not all) sf films exclusively for children are out,
hence few Disney films; most foreign-language films with little or no
circulation outside their country of origin are out (though many
foreign-language films remain in); most superhero films are out (e.g.,
Spiderman, Batman) unless there is a strong sf rationale (e.g., Darkman);
horror movies and monster movies that effectively rely on the supernatural
are out (e.g., Wolfen, Nightwing, Gremlins); time-travel accomplished by
fantastic means is usually out (e.g., Biggles, The Navigator: A Medieval
Odyssey, Peggy Sue Got Married, Somewhere in Time, Time Bandits); apart
from the great originals, films about monsters made from body parts are
out, especially if jokey (e.g., most post-war films in the Frankenstein
series, The Incredible Two-Headed Transplant); most Bigfoot films are out
(e.g., Legend of Boggy Creek); most ESP thrillers are out (e.g., Eyes of
Laura Mars, The Medusa Touch); many future-gladiator, post Mad Max films
are out (e.g., The New Barbarians, Steel Dawn, Turkey Shoot, The Salute of
the Jugger [vt The Blood of Heroes]); many limp parodies are out (e.g.,
Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, Class of Nuke 'Em High); many mediocre
sequels and remakes are out, or more probably, mentioned in passing (e.g.,
Critters 2, The Stepford Children). We hope we have given separate entries
to all the better sequels and remakes.Readers of sf in the written form,
for whom this work is primarily designed, may justifiably feel that films
are given undue prominence. After all, we do not discuss individual novels
in anything like the same detail given to individual films. On the other
hand, the audience for sf cinema is massively greater than that for sf
books, and in the light of the huge popular interest in sf films it seemed
a thorough coverage was necessary, especially since we enjoy them
ourselves. All the same, sf-cinema entries, including those on
film-makers, constitute less than 10% of the entire text, though at
110,000 words this makes the film section of this work one of the most
comprehensive studies available.All the original 1979 entries (John
Brosnan was then the primary contributor in this area) have been
thoroughly revised and in many cases wholly rewritten. New film entries
are mostly by Peter Nicholls, quite a few by Kim Newman, some by other
hands.Theme entries about films are CINEMA, HORROR IN SF (in part),
MONSTER MOVIES, SPLATTER MOVIES and SUPERHEROES (in part), all by Peter
Nicholls. Relevant magazine entries are CINEFANTASTIQUE, STARBURST and
STARLOG. 6. Film-makers There were 19 film-maker entries in the first book
edition, or more if one counts such entries as those on Charles BEAUMONT,
Michael CRICHTON and Richard MATHESON (and in this edition Alan BRENNERT
and Glen A. LARSON) who would have received entries in any case on the
basis of their sf work in written form. There are now 34 film-maker
entries in all, many written by Kim Newman. The film-maker entries
(including some whose work was primarily in television) are Irwin ALLEN,
Gerry and Sylvia ANDERSON, Jack ARNOLD, John BADHAM, Charles BAND, James
CAMERON, John CARPENTER, Larry COHEN, Roger CORMAN, David CRONENBERG, Joe
DANTE, John FRANKENHEIMER, Ray HARRYHAUSEN, Byron HASKIN, Gale Anne HURD,
Nigel KNEALE, Fritz LANG, Stanley KUBRICK, George LUCAS, Georges MELIES,
George MILLER, Terry NATION, Willis O'BRIEN, George PAL, Gene RODDENBERRY,
George A. ROMERO, John SAYLES, Ridley SCOTT, Rod SERLING, Curt SIODMAK,
Steven SPIELBERG, Andrei TARKOVSKY, Peter WATKINS and Robert WISE.7.
Television As with films, we are thorough without being fully
comprehensive. There are about 110 tv entries in all. Most of these
entries are for tv series, some for tv miniseries and serials.
(Made-for-tv movies we classify as films, as noted above.) We do not
include animated tv series for children, such as The Jetsons, with the
exception (by popular demand) of the various animated puppet series, like
Stingray, made by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. A fringe area, where we have
made decisions which will certainly be seen by some as arbitrary, concerns
tv series centering on a Superhero whose powers (generally) stem from some
sort of scientific disaster. Thus we do have an entry for The Incredible
Hulk, but no entry for The Flash, which we see as a crime show rather than
sf. We have been rather niggardly about including serials and miniseries,
concentrating primarily on those, like the four Quatermass stories and
(much more recently) The Cloning of Joanna May, that have aroused much
general interest or are of obviously high quality. We do tend to give
entries in cases where there was a film spin-off, or a film of the same
title, so as to clear up possible confusion, as with The Trollenberg
Terror and Day of the Triffids. We believe there are no omissions at all
of live-action tv series for adults in the English language up to 1991
that lasted any length of time and are inarguably sf in content. We also
give entries for famous fantasy series with occasional sf content, such as
The Twilight Zoneand Amazing Stories. Tv entries for this CD-ROM edition
have mostly been written by Peter Nicholls, some by Kim Newman; many
surviving from the first book edition are by John Brosnan.8. Magazines We
give entries to the most important pulp and other general-fiction
magazines that printed sf before the advent of genre-sf magazines in 1926,
such as The Argosy and The Strand Magazine; these are listed under ARGOSY
and The STRAND MAGAZINE; these are listed under MAGAZINES or PULP
MAGAZINES. We include a number of the SUPERHERO and supervillain pulps of
the 1930s, like CAPTAIN HAZZARD and DR. YEN SIN; these, too, will be found
listed under PULP MAGAZINES. We count in the catch-all magazine category
(as opposed to the specialized FANZINE category) maybe 10 critical
journals about sf, some wholly academic, like SCIENCE-FICTION STUDIES, and
some less so, like SCIENCE FICTION & FANTASY BOOK REVIEW. We also include
the most important sf-movie magazines: CINEFANTASTIQUE, STARBURST and
STARLOG.But the centrepiece of our magazine entries comprises the fiction
magazines, whether fully professional or SEMIPROZINES. We attempt to give
entries to all professional sf magazines and semiprozines in the English
language, past and current, but will not tempt fate by claiming 100%
success in this surprisingly difficult exercise; in the first book edition
we claimed (slightly incorrectly) to give entries also to "all fantasy
magazines that regularly printed stories by sf authors", but we do not
repeat that claim here: the borderland between fantasy magazine and sf
magazine is grey; and while we hope to have given entries to all fantasy
magazines that extend clearly if occasionally into the sf area, and to
some like Unknown that rarely did but nevertheless featured largely in the
ethos of the sf community, we have eliminated some entries, like Coven 13,
Mind Magic and Fantasy Tales, where the distance from sf magazines proper
seems too large. On the other hand, we have resuscitated some candidates
not given entries first time around, like magazines of horror, which have
a genuine sf relevance, and generally we still include a great many
magazines, like Bizarre Mystery Magazine, that were or are fantasy
magazines primarily. The line has to be arbitrary, and we do not claim
omniscience at generic diagnosis.All magazines can be regarded as
anthologies, and the distinction between the two is not nearly as clear as
might be thought. In cases where original-anthology series announce
themselves as periodicals by being numbered and dated (especially on the
cover), and especially when they contain magazine features like letter
columns, editorials and so on, they can be regarded as magazines, even if
they physically resemble paperback or even hardcover books. Some announce
themselves as such, Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine being one. Further
borderline examples are Avon Fantasy Reader (regarded by the fans of the
time as a magazine, and so indexed in the standard magazine references by
Donald Day and Erwin Strauss), Destinies, Far Frontiers and New Destinies
- there are others. The main practical result of this policy is that we do
not necessarily separately list every title in such series as we would
have done if we regarded them as original-anthology series proper.There is
a total of about 240 fiction-magazine and critical-journal entries. Some
of these single entries cover two magazines with identical titles, so
about 250 magazines are given entries. We do not generally give entries to
foreign-language magazines, though a good many of these are cross-referred
to the relevant Country entry. Most magazine entries were written by Brian
Stableford, Peter Nicholls, Frank Parnell, Greg Feeley and Malcolm
Edwards. It is no longer the case that our encyclopedia gives the most
comprehensive magazine coverage (see the reference book by Marshall Tymn
and Mike Ashley), but it is certainly the most comprehensive in a work not
exclusively devoted to the topic.9. Fanzines There are 36 entries devoted
to individual fanzines, this branch of amateur publishing being of central
importance to the history of the sf community. (Data on an additional
dozen or so titles are available by following up cross-references, title
changes being common in fanzine publishing.) However, we have been highly
selective, concentrating on fanzines that have generally been quite
long-running and which have as part of their content some serious comment
on sf, as opposed to general news or gossip. There is a very thin line
between fanzines and critical journals on the one hand, and fanzines and
semiprozines on the other, so our count of 36 might be higher or lower
than another's. Most of these entries were written by Peter Roberts (first
edition), Rob Hansen and Peter Nicholls.10. Comics Comic books and comic
strips are taken more seriously by many more people now than was the case
a decade ago, partly as a result of artistic developments in the field. We
have reflected this widespread interest by expanding the size and number
of entries dealing with both historical and contemporary sf comics. The
two main theme entries dealing with comics are COMICS and GRAPHIC NOVELS;
a third entry, SUPERHEROES, deals primarily with comics, films and tv. We
have entries on three comic-book publishers, DC COMICS, EC COMICS and
MARVEL COMICS. The entries on comics titles and comics characters are
ALLEY OOP, AMERICAN FLAGG!, BARBARELLA, BRICK BRADFORD,BUCK ROGERS IN THE
25TH CENTURY, CAPTAIN MARVEL, CONNIE, DAN DARE - PILOT OF THE FUTURE,
FLASH GORDON, GARTH, HEAVY METAL, JEFF HAWKE, JUDGE DREDD, LEGION OF
SUPER-HEROES, LOVE AND ROCKETS, METAL HURLANT,MISTER X, NEXUS, SUPERMAN,
SWAMP THING, TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES, 2,000 A.D., WATCHMEN and X-MEN.
Entries on writers and illustrators primarily associated with comics are
Neal ADAMS, Enki BILAL, Vaughn BODE, Brian BOLLAND, Chester BROWN, Charles
BURNS, Dick CALKINS, Howard CHAYKIN, Chris CLAREMONT, Richard CORBEN,
Philippe DRUILLET, Dave GIBBONS, Jean GIRAUD (also known as Moebius),
Frank HAMPSON, Jack KIRBY, Stan LEE, Winsor McCAY, Dave McKEAN, Lorenzo
MATOTTI, Frank MILLER, Gray MORROW, Alan MOORE, Katsuhiro OTOMO, Alex
RAYMOND, Bill SIENKEWICZ, Dave SIM, James STERANKO, Osamu TEZUKA and Wally
WOOD. That makes 59 strongly comics-oriented entries. There are of course
many further entries on artists we think of primarily as sf book and
magazine illustrators, but who also worked in comics, such as Frank
FRAZETTA. Many entries on writers and editors include discussion of their
work in comics. These would include Alfred BESTER, Eando BINDER, James
CAWTHORN, Gerard F. CONWAY, Gardner F. FOX, Neil GAIMAN, H.L. GOLD, Ron
GOULART, Edmond HAMILTON, Harry HARRISON, Michael MOORCOCK, Philip Francis
NOWLAN, Julius SCHWARTZ, Mort WEISINGER, Manly Wade WELLMAN.The majority
of comics entries were written by Ron Tiner and Steve Whitaker; but nine
other contributors have also written some.11. Illustrators We include no
entries for "gallery" artists like John Martin (1789-1854) whose work
occasionally (with hindsight) included sf themes: the END OF THE WORLD in
Martin's case. We restrict ourselves to GENRE-SF artists whose sf
illustrative work is most closely associated with magazines and books,
though some have also worked in films, record covers or calendars. There
is some cross-over between the SF-Illustrators category and the Comics
category; several artists listed above under Comics, like Gray Morrow and
Wally Wood, worked also for the sf magazines. There are 65 entries in this
category, aside from artists listed under Comics and occasional artists
(e.g., Fred T. JANE, Keith ROBERTS) who would have appeared in this volume
anyway for their fiction.Most illustrator entries were written by Jon
Gustafson, the majority in collaboration with Peter Nicholls.The 64
SF-Illustrators entries are George BARR, Wayne BARLOWE, Earle K. BERGEY,
Hannes BOK, Chesley BONESTELL, Howard V. BROWN, Margaret BRUNDAGE, Jim
BURNS, Thomas CANTY, Edd CARTIER, David A. CHERRY, Mal DEAN, Roger DEAN,
Vincent DI FATE, Leo and Diane DILLON, Elliott DOLD, Bob EGGLETON, Edmund
EMSHWILLER, Stephen E. FABIAN, Virgil FINLAY, Christopher FOSS, Frank
FRAZETTA, Frank Kelly FREAS, Robert FUQUA, Jack GAUGHAN, H.R. GIGER,
Richard GLYN JONES, James GURNEY, David HARDY, Eddie JONES, Josh KIRBY,
Roy G. KRENKEL, Paul LEHR, Brian LEWIS, A. LEYDENFROST, Angus McKIE, Don
MAITZ, Rodney MATTHEWS, Ian MILLER, Leo MOREY, Paul ORBAN, Frank R. PAUL,
Bruce PENNINGTON, Richard M. POWERS, Gerard A. QUINN, Anthony ROBERTS,
Albert ROBIDA, Hubert ROGERS, ROWENA, Rod RUTH, J. Allen ST JOHN, Charles
SCHNEEMAN Jr, John SCHOENHERR, Alex SCHOMBURG, Barclay SHAW, Rick
STERNBACH, Lawrence Sterne STEVENS, Darrell SWEET, Karel THOLE, Ed
VALIGURSKY, Boris VALLEJO, VAN DONGEN, H.W. WESSO,Michael WHELAN, Tim
WHITE.12. Book Publishers We have expanded our coverage of mass-market and
general publishers with strong sf lines, while continuing our coverage of
specialist sf publishers. The result, if these are read together with the
publishing and small presses and limited editions theme entries, is a
history (not comprehensive) of post-war publishing of sf books and also
books about sf. Publisher entries are ACE BOOKS, ADVENT PUBLISHERS, ARKHAM
HOUSE, ARNO PRESS, BADGER BOOKS, BALLANTINE BOOKS, BANTAM BOOKS, BLUEJAY,
BORGO PRESS, CURTIS WARREN, DAW BOOKS, DEL REY BOOKS, DOUBLEDAY, ESSEX
HOUSE,FANTASY PRESS, FANTASY PUBLISHING COMPANY INC., FAX COLLECTORS
EDITIONS, GARLAND, GNOME PRESS, GOLLANCZ, GREENWOOD, GREGG PRESS, HADLEY
PUBLISHING COMPANY, HYPERION PRESS,LASER BOOKS, MIRAGE PRESS, PRIME PRESS,
ROBERT HALE LIMITED, SCIENCE FICTION BOOK CLUB, SHASTA PUBLISHERS,
STARMONT HOUSE, TIMESCAPE,TOR BOOKS, UNDERWOOD-MILLER and MARK V.ZIESING.
There are 35 entries in this selective list.13. Original Anthologies The
most important location, after the magazines, of sf short fiction - sf
being one of the few forms of fiction where the short story and the
novella are still very much alive - is in original anthologies
(anthologies of stories not previously published). There are some hundreds
of these, far too many to list individually. We do, however, give entries
to English-language original-anthology series devoted to genre-sf stories,
provided that the series contains three or more books. One or two such
series may have slipped our net, but we believe we have caught most of
them. We do not, however, give entries to shared-world original-anthology
series, though we make an exception for wild cards and some more are
listed under games workshop. When an original-anthology series like
Destinies or Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine describes itself as a
magazine, even though it is in book form, then we list it under Magazines.
The Original-Anthology entries were mostly written by Malcolm Edwards
(first edition) and Peter Nicholls (subsequent editions).14. Awards There
will always be argument as to the true significance (if any) of sf awards,
but it is obviously necessary to give the most important, and to list all
their winners. The general question of awards is discussed under AWARDS,
which also lists the 11 major awards, notably the HUGO and the NEBULA,
that receive their own entries.15. Miscellaneous There remains a residue
of bits and pieces, mostly about sf organizations (Clarion SCIENCE FICTION
WRITER'S WORKSHOP, SCIENCE FICTION FOUNDATION, SCIENCE FICTION RESEARCH
ASSOCIATION, WORLD SF and others), sf fandom (APA, CONVENTIONS, FANDOM,
FAN LANGUAGE, FANZINE, FUTURIANS and others) sf COLLECTIONS (four of
these), different publishing formats (BEDSHEET, DIGEST, etc.), and even a
couple on characters like CAPTAIN JUSTICE. There are 30 miscellaneous
entries, some of the fannish ones originally by Peter Roberts and revised
by Rob Hansen, most of the rest by Nicholls.

Intro to the 2nd Book Edition
From The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, John Clute and Peter Nicholls,
eds.The first edition of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction won a Hugo
Award as best nonfiction sf book of its year, and immediately became the
standard one-volume reference in the field. However, as the years passed,
its usefulness diminished as it fell slowly out of date. That first
edition was completed in June 1978, and published in 1979. This is its
second edition, from new publishers. It has been not only updated, but
also wholly revised and almost wholly rewritten. In effect it is a new
book, and we believe it is a better one. It is certainly very much bigger.
Excluding straightforward cross-reference entries, the first edition
contained approximately 2800 entries; measured on the same basis, this new
edition contains over 4360. The first edition was approximately 730,000
words long; this new edition is approximately 1,300,000 words long. In
addition to the 4360+ entries, it contains around 2100 cross-reference
entries.The first edition was written faster than any of us were
comfortable with (about 20 months); this edition took two years to write,
a tight timetable, but manageable in part because of the technology of
computer wordprocessing. The book has been typeset from computer text
generated by the editors. The three senior editors - John Clute, Peter
Nicholls and Brian Stableford - were the same three who were primarily
responsible for the first edition, and feel that our mutual familiarity
made the task much easier this time round. Moreover, in the late 1970s the
number of secondary sources available for cross-checking were
comparatively few; now they are many. We continued to use primary sources
whenever we could locate them, which we usually could, but it was a burden
removed from our shoulders to have these secondary sources as a back-up.
Our Acknowledgments section lists some of those we found most useful.On
the other hand, the world of science fiction is much more complex than it
was in 1978; genre sf continues to grow and flourish, and its description
remains our central task; but genre sf more and more occupies a world
which, because of new category and marketing distinctions, is difficult to
comprehend at a glance. Game worlds, film and tv spin-offs, shared worlds,
graphic novels, franchises, young-adult fiction, choose-your-own-plot
tales, technothrillers, survivalist fiction, sf horror novels, fantasy
novels with sf centres, and so on - all contribute to a structure that
hardly existed in the 1970s. The world of sf is also harder to describe
now - not just because it has become more difficult, but because we have
begun to discover that it always was. We entered on the first edition with
joyful naivete; we are older and wiser now, and we know that the secret
history of sf, like the house in John Crowley's Little, Big (1981), is
bigger on the inside than the outside, and that the further in you go the
bigger it gets. This is by way of apology: for every problem we have put
right, two more have raised their heads; every discovery we (and others)
make opens vistas which need to be explored. We know our book is neither
perfect nor complete.We have tried to cope with the expanding world of sf,
and with our expanding perceptions of that world, by including many more
theme and terminology entries with - we hope - a clarifying effect. There
are, indeed, more entries in every category in the book, not just entries
dealing with updatings over the past 14 years, but entries covering the
whole body of the genre as we have found out more about it.There is
another difference between this edition and the last. The first time Peter
Nicholls was where the buck stopped. This time John Clute, Nicholl's
Associate Editor in the first edition, is a full and equal partner. There
is no seniority on either side, and editorial differences of opinion have
been remarkably few. The only problems have been the communications
difficulties brought about by Clute working in London, UK, while Nicholls
worked in Melbourne, Australia. To simplify matters when we began work (in
August 1990) we agreed, like the ancient Romans, to split the Empire.
Clute, who for several years has been updating a bibliographic data bank,
took charge of author entries; Nicholls took charge of the rest. This
system (which to a degree reflects what happened in practice on the first
book, too) works out at about half the book each. Each of us, however, has
written entries for the other's half, and each of us has checked the
other's text. Brian Stableford has been our safety net, and a major
contributor in his own right. We have commissioned many new writers (and
received a gratifying number of volunteers), some for single and some for
multiple entries, but none of these, this time around, has written as many
entries as did, for the first edition, Malcolm Edwards - who was with
Stableford then a Contributing Editor - John Brosnan and David Pringle;
many of their entries survive in this edition, in (almost always) modified
form.In this second edition, to a greater degree than in the first, most
of the writing - perhaps 85% - is by Clute, Nicholls and Stableford, who
despite small disagreements have displayed a critical consensus over a
stikingly large range of issues. This means, for good or ill, that the
book has a more unified tone of voice than most reference works (whose
editors often write only a small proportion of the book themselves). We
should point out, remembering charges of Anglophilia made of the first
edition by a vocal minority, that only Stableford is English. Paul
Barnett, the Technical Editor, is Scottish. Clute is Canadian and Nicholls
Australian, and both have spent some years in the USA, whose culture they
regard as adoptively an important part of what they are, and central to
what sf is.All entries are signed by initials. We do this to give credit
where credit is due, and also to apportion responsibility for those cases
where the reader may feel that the content of an entry has gone beyond the
strictly factual into the judgmental. In the interest of liveliness and
readability, we continue to allow, as we did in the first edition, a
modicum of explicit critical comment. There is, anyway, no such thing as a
purely objective reference work, since the very choice of what is
discussed (and at what length) will suggest (to some readers) a value
judgment. But here a cautionary note: the length of an entry depends on
many factors; we cannot stress too strongly that conclusions drawn by
readers about editorial preferences, on the basis of an entry's length,
may well be wrong. To restate: opinion has been kept minimal, and in every
case it is possible to identify, through the initials used, whose opinion
it may be, though this second edition does contain many more examples of
entries signed by two, three or even four initials than did the first.
Some of this results from editorial modification of existing entries whose
authors in many cases were not able to revise their own entries; some
entries were collaborative from the first. The first initial given is
generally that of the primary contributor. However, even though every
entry is signed, there is a real sense in which this volume is a team
effort, not least in that each entry has been scanned by at least four
readers apart from its author, resulting often in the incorporation of
uncredited suggestions and corrections.The final manuscript (on computer
disk, not paper) of this encyclopedia was completed in mid-August, 1992,
though some subsequent modifications (and small factual additions relating
to awards, deaths and so on) continued to be made up to the last possible
moment.This is intended as a book to be dipped into or read for pleasure,
not merely as a reference source for data. Serendipity may bring curious
and pleasing conjunctions of entries together; an elaborate system of
cross-references is designed to allow the reader to weave zigzag trails
from entry to entry, constructing interrelations - sometimes surprising -
as they go. We see this book as more than merely an encyclopedia of sf; it
is a comprehensive history and analysis of the genre.John Clute and Peter
Nicholls, November 1992
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More's Utopia
Thomas MORE's (perhaps ironic) description of an ideal society was the
beginning of the literature of UTOPIAS, a word More coined. Utopian
societies flourished in early SF.

Godwin's The Man in the Moone
Francis GODWIN's account of a voyage to the Moon and the utopian society
that exists there is one of the first accounts of space travel in fiction.
See Also: SPACE FLIGHT

Swift's Gulliver's Travels
Jonathan SWIFT's account of Captain Gulliver's four voyages to bizarre
alien societies was SATIRIcal in intent, but had a great influence over
several traditions of subsequent SF.

Voltaire's Micromegas
VOLTAIRE's account of two aliens' trip to Earth (and their commentary on
what they see) is one of the first stories to present humanity as
unimportant in the cosmic scheme of things.

Shelley 's Frankenstein
Despite its GOTHIC elements and overt philosophizing, Mary Wollstonecraft
SHELLEY's novel contains the major elements of science fiction. It
contributed enormously to SF's development.See Also: FRANKENSTEIN

Seaborn's Symzonia
Adam SEABORN's tale, Symzonia: A Voyage of Discovery, is both the first
American utopian novel and the first novel to dramatize the HOLLOW EARTH
theories popular in the early nineteenth century.

The Moon Hoax
The New York Sun publishes accounts of life on the MOON, as seen through
a powerful new telescope. This famous hoax remained popular for decades,
and inspired other fantastic tales.

Poe's Arthur Gordon Pym
Ostensibly a FANTASTIC VOYAGE to the Antarctic (then almost wholly
unknown), Edgar Allan POE's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym also plays
with the HOLLOW EARTH theme. Both remained popular subjects in nineteenth
century SF.

Hawthorne's Rappaccini's Daughter
Much of Nathaniel HAWTHORNE's fiction contains GOTHIC or PROTO SCIENCE
FICTION elements. "Rappaccini's Daughter", which is SF, is one of the
finest nineteenth century American short stories.

Journey to the Center of the Earth
The most famous of the nineteenth century HOLLOW EARTH stories, Jules
VERNE's novel invests its expedition with a sense of exploration and
wonder.See Also: JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH

Verne 's From the Earth to the Moon
The first attempt to propose a realistic space voyage, Jules VERNE's
novel helped move SF from the realm of fantasy into rational
speculation.See Also: SPACE FLIGHT; FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON.

Verne 's Twenty Thousand Leagues
Although primitive submarines had existed since the eighteenth century,
Jules VERNE's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea was the first book to
exploit the dramatic potential of undersea exploration.See Also: UNDER THE
SEA.

German Invasion genre
George T. CHESNEY's The Battle of Dorking inaugurates the" German
INVASION" genre of British SF, which remains popular right up to the
outbreak of World War I.

Greg's Across the Zodiac
Percy GREG's Across the Zodiac: the Story of a Wrecked Record combines
numerous nineteenth century conventions - ANTIGRAVITY, the communist
UTOPIA, and the manuscript of a travel diary - with unusual care and
conviction.

Stevenson's Jekyll and Hyde
Robert Louis STEVENSON combined gothic and SF elements into the
archetypal tale of multiple personalities in The Strange Case of Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, so famous that it has become part of the English
language.See Also: PSYCHOLOGY.

The first time travel paradox story
F. ANSTEY's The Time Bargain, though it contains no time machine or
theory of time travel, is the first story to utilize the time travel
paradox.See Also: TIME PARADOXES.

Wells 's The Time Machine
H.G. WELLS 's THE TIME MACHINE, which originated the idea of the time
machine, provided a rationale for TIME TRAVEL, until then a fantasy
device.

Wells 's The War of the Worlds
The first novel of an alien INVASION, H.G. WELLS's WAR OF THE WORLDS is
closer to its modern successors than to the essential gothic SF of most of
the nineteenth century.

Wells 's First Men in the Moon
Science fiction had not yet discovered space travel as its quintessential
theme when THE FIRST MEN IN THE MOON, H.G. WELLS's novel of a modern
FANTASTIC VOYAGE, appeared.

German invasion spoof
England had worried about the military threat posed by Germany for a
generation, inspiring dozens of alarmist novels. P.G. WODEHOUSE's spoof,
The Swoop! Or How Clarence Saved England: A Tale of the Great Invasion,
came only five years before World War I really did break out.

The conquest of space coined
H.G. WELLS coined the term" the conquest of outer space "in The World Set
Free in 1914. At least three books have used it as a title, the most
famous being Willy LEY's 1949 work, The Conquest of Space.

Lindsay's Arcturus
David LINDSAY's 1920 fantasy, A VOYAGE TO ARCTURUS, although forgotten
for decades, enjoyed a newfound popularity in the 1970s. Today it is
regarded as a classic of science FANTASY.

Metropolis opens
Like all SF films of its day (and most since) METROPOLIS is
unsophisticated in its story, but its exceptional visual power
demonstrated SF CINEMA's potential.

Stapledon's Last and First Men
Perhaps the finest of Olaf STAPLEDON's meditations upon the FAR FUTURE
and humanity's destiny, LAST AND FIRST MEN was for a time famous outside
the science fiction genre.

Taine's The Time Stream
Serialized in Wonder Stories, John TAINE's best novel is a sophisticated
treatment of TIME TRAVEL innovations and paradoxes; it had an enormous
influence on subsequent SF.

Huxley's Brave New World
Aldous HUXLEY's mordant SATIREon twentieth century scientism, BRAVE NEW
WORLD, does not belong to American genre SF, but it had an enormous
influence over it.

Moore's Shambleau
Written when she was twenty-two, C.L. MOORE's first story made her famous
in the world of SF PULP MAGAZINES, where she became a major figure for the
next quarter century.

Weinbaum's A Martian Odyssey
Although Stanley G. WEINBAUM died within a few years of publishing this
story, its vivid evocation of ALIEN life was deeply influential.

Things to Come opens
THINGS TO COME, a grandly conceived and big-budget film, was one of the
few 1930s films to capture SF's SENSE OF WONDER, as well as its prophetic
clunkiness.

Stapledon's Star Maker
Perhaps Olaf STAPLEDON's finest novel, STAR MAKER offers a breathtakingly
panoramic vision of the future which exerted a great influence upon genre
SF writers.See Also: FAR FUTURE.

Williamson's Legion serialized
Jack WILLIAMSON's THE LEGION OF TIME , a tale of alternate futures
battling for control, combined melodrama with metaphysics and contributed
significantly to the TIME TRAVELtheme.

Lewis's Out of the Silent Planet
Although it partakes of religious allegory, C.S. LEWIS's novel is true
SF, of the British tradition that owed nothing to American pulp magazines.
See Also: PLANETARY ROMANCE.

Golden Age of SF
Although good SF had been appearing in England for some time, the period
1939-46, called "the GOLDEN AGE OF SF", saw the first mature and
sophisticated SF from the American pulp magazines.

1st World SF Convention
East Coast fans, following up the success of a New York convention in
1938, met the next year, grandly naming the CONVENTION after the World's
Fair in progress.

Heinlein's first story
Robert A. HEINLEIN's first story, written in response to a story contest,
but submitted instead to Astounding Science Fiction, won him immediate
popularity and launched his career.

van Vogt's Black Destroyer
A. E. VAN VOGT's first story - a taut melodrama of an alien besieging an
unsuspecting spaceship crew - won him immediate and lasting acclaim.

Lest Darkness Fall serialized
The first sophisticated alternate history in American pulp magazines, L.
Sprague DE CAMP's early novel, LEST DARKNESS FALL, contributed enormously
to this subgenre.See Also: ALTERNATE WORLDS; HISTORY IN SF.

Slan serialized
The most famous story of persecuted SUPERMEN in science fiction, SLAN, by
A. E. VAN VOGT, invests its ingenuous tale with the dramatic power of wish
fulfillment fantasy.

The Incompleat Enchanter serialized
Humorous fantasy was virtually unknown when L. Sprague DE CAMP and
Fletcher PRATTcreated Harold Shea and his series of adventures in
alternate mythologies.See Also: ALTERNATE WORLDS.

Hubbard's Fear
Now famous as the creator of DIANETICS and founder of the Church of
SCIENTOLOGY, L. Ron HUBBARDwas first a successful pulp SF writer. Fear and
"Typewriter in the Sky" are among Hubbard's best work.

Sturgeon's Microcosmic God
Theodore STURGEON's tale of a power-mad SCIENTISTand his warring
creations has few similarities to his later work, but remains one of the
best-remembered stories from SF's GOLDEN AGE.

Stars Wars and Close Encounters
No one would have predicted at the beginning of 1977 that the sci-fi film
would become a blockbuster genre. The runaway successes of STAR WARS and
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND prompted a boom in SF.See Also: CINEMA.

Padgett's Mimsy
The SF stories that Henry KUTTNER and C.L. MOORE published under the
byline Lewis Padgett were among the finest of the 1940s. "Mimsy Were the
Borogroves" is perhaps their finest tale.

Wylie predicts atom bomb
When Philip WYLIE submitted his story, "The Paradise Crater", to American
Magazine, his prediction of an atom bomb got him placed under house
arrest.

Moore's Vintage Season
C.L. MOORE's novella of tourists from the future arriving to watch an
imminent catastrophe presages the tone and style of much 1950s SF.

Heinlein for young readers
Upon returning to writing at the end of World War II, Robert A. HEINLEIN
began his enormously successful series of SF novels for young readers,
starting with Rocket Ship Galileo.See Also: CHILDREN'S SF.

Shasta and Gnome publish
American SF was almost entirely published in magazines until after World
War II, when several small presses, SHASTAPublishers and GNOME Press,
began to publish major writers in hardcover.

Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four
George ORWELL was known as a radical journalist and minor comic novelist
when he published his last novel, NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR. He did not live to
see it become a classic of political SF.See Also: DYSTOPIAS.

Vance's The Dying Earth
Although Jack VANCE's cycle of stories in THE DYING EARTH are set in a
decadent future and are more fantasy than SF, they have had an immense
influence upon both SF and fantasy writers.

Kornbluth's The Little Black Bag
C.M. KORNBLUTH's story of a bag of medical marvels timeslipped from the
future is by far his most famous story, and has been adapted to
television.See Also: MEDICINE.

Leiber's Bad Day for Sales
Fritz LEIBERoffers a withering view of American consumerism in "A Bad Day
for Sales".

Kornbluth's The Marching Morons
C.M. KORNBLUTH's story of how eugenics backfires when only intelligent
people practice birth control is famous enough to be cited in political
arguments.See Also: INTELLIGENCE.

The Demolished Man serialized
Alfred BESTER's first novel made his name in science fiction, and
inaugurated a decade of writing masterful SF. THE DEMOLISHED MAN remains a
compelling read after forty years.

Vonnegut's Player Piano
Kurt VONNEGUT's PLAYER PIANO is a SATIRE on automation and Madison
Avenue. It was published as a contemporary novel, but it was reprinted in
paperback as SF as Utopia Fourteen.

Norton's Star Man's Son
Andre NORTON's first SF novel, and in many ways her best, was STAR MAN'S
SON, 2250 A.D. . This book served as an introduction to SF for a
generation of readers.

Sturgeon 's More Than Human
Expanded from his 1952 novella "Baby Is Three", Theodore STURGEON's MORE
THAN HUMAN is a novel about a group mind and probably the first SF novel
to make use of gestalt theory.

SF Book Club starts
The SCIENCE FICTION BOOK CLUB began in the United States around 1953,
published by Nelson Doubleday, Inc. The company was sold to the German
company, Bertelsmann, in 1986. Since its beginnings, the Book Club has
made many hardcovers available to SF readers.

The Space Merchants
The first and best of Frederik POHLand C.M. KORNBLUTH's social SATIREs,
THE SPACE MERCHANTS is a savage satire of Madison Avenue chicanery, and
remains readable today.

Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings
J. R. R. TOLKIEN had labored for decades on his epic tale of
Middle-Earth, which attracted only a modest - if enthusiastic - readership
for the first decade of publication.See Also: FANTASY.

The Twilight Zone on television
Although most of its episodes were fantasy and many were predicated on
surprise endings, TWILIGHT ZONE did much to popularize SF in TELEVISION.

Keyes's Flowers for Algernon
Daniel KEYES's 1959 novelette won the Hugo Award; its 1966 novel version
won a Nebula, and the 1968 film CHARLY won Cliff Robertson an Academy
Award for Best Actor.

Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz
A CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ, Walter M. MILLERJr.'s classic novel of humanity
rising from the ashes of nuclear HOLOCAUST, has moved readers from far
outside the SF genre.

Leiber writes Buck Rogers
Fritz LEIBER, unable to make a living by his fiction, spends a year
writing continuity for the BUCK ROGERS comic strip. He also writes a
Tarzan novel.

Stranger in a Strange Land
Although Robert A. HEINLEIN's novel won him his third Hugo Award, its
real fame came only later in the sixties, when STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND
gained a counterculture following that Heinlein did not especially
welcome.

The Man in the High Castle
Although it was not the first novel in which the Allies lost World War
II, Philip K. DICK's THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE was one of the best, and
it remains his best-known work.See Also: HITLER WINS.

Vance's The Dragon Masters
THE DRAGON MASTERS, Jack VANCE's elegant novella of a war fought between
factions using biologically engineered "dragons" , remains one of his
finest works.

New generation of writers
Ursula K. LE GUIN, Samuel R. DELANY, Roger ZELAZNY, Thomas M. DISCH, and
Keith LAUMER all publish their first stories. All but Delany make their
first sales to Amazing Stories.

Zelazny's Ecclesiastes
Only a year after selling his first story, Roger ZELAZNYpublished" A Rose
for Ecclesiastes", one of the finest evocations of SF romanticism.

Moorcock editor of New Worlds
Michael MOORCOCK took over the editorship of NEW WORLDS in 1964, but it
was not until he became publisher in 1967 that the magazine came into its
own.

Pangborn's Davy
"DAVY", Edgar PANGBORN's novel of a POST-HOLOCAUST PASTORAL America,
commanded a small but enthusiastic readership for many years and is
probably due for revival.

Herbert's Dune
Published in a small edition by a little-known publisher, Frank
HERBERT'sDUNE became a paperback best-seller and one of the most famous
novels in the history of SF.See Also: ECOLOGY; SF02925 MESSIAHS.

The Lord of the Rings in paperback
Although first published in 1954-55, it was only a decade later that J.R.
TOLKIEN'sLord of the Rings, issued in paperback, began to reach its
enormous audience.See Also: FANTASY.

Star Trek on American television
Although comfortingly familiar to viewers today, STAR TREK's multiracial
crew, with women and an alien on the bridge, seemed dauntingly futuristic
in the show's first season.See Also: TELEVISION.

Knight's Orbit series
One of the first original anthology series in the U.S., ORBIT published
much of the best short SF to appear in the late sixties and early
seventies.See Also: Damon KNIGHT.

Niven's Neutron Star
Larry NIVEN's early story set the tone of his Tales of Known Space
series, which remains popular thirty years later.

Zelazny's Lord of Light
Roger ZELAZNY's third novel and almost certainly his best, LORD OF LIGHT
is a mixture of SF and mythology that has never been surpassed.

Zoline's Heat Death
Pamela ZOLINE's famous first story, "The Heat Death of the Universe", has
lost none of its freshness since its first appearance in New Worlds in
1967.See Also: ENTROPY.

2001: A Space Odyssey
200L: A SPACE ODYSSEY, Stanley KUBRICK's big-budget, 2 1/2 hour SF epic,
struck many as obscure or pretentious upon its first theatrical release,
but others recognized it as a strikingly original and ambitious
accomplishment.

Sladek's Reproductive System
The Reproductive System, John T. SLADEK's hilarious novel of
self-replicating systems run amok, was first published in the US
as"MECHASM"It seems even more timely today than when it was published in
1968.

Wilhelm's The Planners
Although Kate WILHELM had earlier published mysteries and traditional
outer-space SF, her stories dramatizing present-day technological
forebodings are widely considered her best.

Knight's Masks
This dense, allusive story, first published in Playboy, is perhaps Damon
KNIGHT's finest short work.

Le Guin 's The Left Hand of Darkness
THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS, Ursula K. LE GUIN's novel of a world whose
inhabitants are all of the same sex, won acclaim upon its first appearance
and is regarded today as an SF classic.

Spinrad's Bug Jack Barron
Widely condemned in its time, Norman SPINRAD's BUG JACK BARRON dealt with
issues of sexual politics and power fantasies that struck many readers as
obscene and depraved.

Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five
Kurt VONNEGUTlived through the firebombing of Dresden. AndSLAUGHTERHOUSE-
FIVE combines autobiography with absurdist fantasy, vividly evoking the
subjective experience of war.

Star Trek series ends
STAR TREK goes off the air, but lives on as a cause for a growing number
of Trekkies. Over the next decade the show achieves a greater popularity
than it had enjoyed during its original broadcasts.See Also: TELEVISION.

Niven's Ringworld
RINGWORLD, Larry NIVEN's third novel set in his Tales of Known Space
series, is a great success, and helps inspire the enduring vogue for BIG
DUMB OBJECTS.

Zelazny's Nine Princes in Amber
Roger ZELAZNY's 1970-78 series about warring princes in the one true
realm is FANTASY rather than SF, but the novels have been popular and
influential in both genres.

Lem's Solaris in English
Stanislaw LEM was virtually unknown in English until the publication of
Solaris, still his best-known novel. Within ten years he was the
best-known Central European SF writer.See Also: POLAND.

THX 1138
THX 1138, George LUCAS's first feature film, began life as a film school
project. It was a commercial failure but presaged the visual intensity of
SF films.

Russ's When It Changed
Joanna RUSS published many of her best stories in the early seventies.
"When It Changed" and "Nobody's Home" are among her finest.

Le Guin wins book award
Ursula K. LE GUIN wins the 1972 National Book Award for Best Children's
Book for The Farthest Shore. In her acceptance speech, she defends SF and
Fantasy.

Pynchon refuses book award
Thomas PYNCHON's Gravity's Rainbow fails to win the NEBULA, is vetoed for
the Pulitzer, and wins the National Book Award, which Pynchon refuses.

Le Guin's The Dispossessed
THE DISPOSSESSED: AN AMBIGUOUS UTOPIA, is Ursula K. LE GUIN's novel of a
society of utopian anarchists and their dialectical struggle for survival
against a more powerful industrial culture. It was one of the most widely
read political SF novels of the 70s.See Also: MATHEMATICS; ANSIBLE.

Haldeman's The Forever War
Joe HALDEMAN's gritty account of the unglamorous combat soldier of the
future in THE FOREVER WAR can be read as both a reply to Robert A.
HEINLEIN's Starship Troopers and a reflection of Haldeman's own Vietnam
experience.

Varley's Eight Worlds series
John VARLEY's Eight Worlds stories, collected in The Persistence of
Vision and Picnic on Nearside, were among the most popular of the 70s.

Russ's The Female Man
THE FEMALE MAN, Joanna RUSS's third novel, was derisively received by
most SF reviewers, but it went on to develop a reputation as one of the
finest works of FEMINISTSF.

Stars Wars and Close Encounters
No one would have predicted at the beginning of 1977 that the sci-fi film
would become a blockbuster genre. The runaway successes of STAR WARS and
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND prompted a boom in SF.See Also: CINEMA.

Pohl's Gateway
Frederik POHL enjoyed a creative renaissance in the mid-70s, writing
better than he ever had before. Gateway is widely considered his best
novel.

Tiptree is Alice Sheldon
James TIPTREE, Jr., whose personal reticence was a matter of widespread
curiosity, was revealed to be Alice Sheldon, a retired psychologist.

The real Enterprise
The prototype Space Shuttle is named the Enterprise, after the vessel in
STAR TREK.

1st Omni issue
First issue of OMNI, the first successful SF slick magazine. Although
most of the magazine is devoted to popular science, it becomes a
prestigious market for short SF.

Star Trek The Motion Picture
The long-awaited return of STAR TREK comes as a big-budget motion
picture, STAR TREK THE MOTION PICTURE, which devotes enormous energies to
dramatizing a surprisingly standard Star Trek story.

Space elevator proposed
Arthur C. CLARKE and Charles SHEFFIELD both publish novels proposing a
space elevator running from Earth to geosynchronous orbit.See Also:
DISCOVERY AND INVENTION.

The Book of the New Sun
After seven years of writing, Gene WOLFE publishes The Shadow of the
Torturer. The next three volumes of his tetralogy follow at yearly
intervals.

Hoban's Riddley Walker
RIDDLEY WALKER, Russell HOBAN's first SF novel, is a moving and
stylistically inventive post- HOLOCAUST novel and one of the finest in
science fiction.See Also: LINGUISTICS.

Tor Books publishes first titles
Published by the just-founded Tom Doherty Associates, TOR Books became
(along with Bantam Spectra) one of the two leading American SF publishers
in the 1980s.

Timescape Books launched
Although it lasted only three years, TIMESCAPE BOOKSpublished a large and
distinguished line of important SF books.

Thomas's The White Hotel
D.M. THOMAS, a British poet who has published SF-tinged poetry in NEW
WORLDS and elsewhere, becomes famous with the publication of "The White
Hotel".

Sterling's Shaper/Mechanist series
Bruce STERLING publishes "Swarm" and "Spider Rose", the first stories in
his Shaper/Mechanist sequence, which will culminate in his 1985 novel,
SCHISMATRIX.See Also: CYBERPUNK.

Powers' The Anubis Gates
Tim POWERS's The Anubis Gates, a grotesque and colorful fantasy set in
Dickens's London, helps inaugurate the STEAMPUNKmovement.

Jones's Divine Endurance
Gwenyth JONES's DIVINE ENDURANCE, called by some the greatest British SF
novel, appears in England.

The Terminator opens
Based on numerous SF inspirations - including Harlan ELLISON's Outer
Limits script, "Soldier" - " THE TERMINATOR" was a remarkably energetic
film and a great critical and popular success; it spawned a sequel and
numerous imitators.See CINEMA.

Heyday of cyberpunk
William GIBSON's Neuromancer wins the NEBULA, the HUGO, and the PHILIP K.
DICK AWARD. CYBERPUNK enters the mass media.

Willis's All My Darling Daughters
Connie WILLIS's short fiction won praise and numerous awards in the
1980s. This story, perhaps her most controversial, did not appear in any
SF magazine prior to publication in her collection, Fire Watch.

Star Trek: The Next Generation
Eighteen years after the original STAR TREK went off the air, STAR TREK:
THE NEXT GENERATION premieres after a near-frenzy of anticipation. More
sophisticated than the first series, it is an enormous success.See:
TELEVISION.

Simmons's Hyperion
Dan SIMMONS published three novels in 1989. HYPERION, the best-known, won
the HUGO Award.

The Difference Engine
The widely anticipated A DIFFERENCE ENGINE brought together SF's two
central writers of CYBERPUNK - Bruce STERLING and William GIBSON -in a
novel that seemed an epitome of the STEAMPUNK subgenre.

Total Recall opens
Paul Verhoeven's TOTAL RECALL, a big-budget attempt to combine the
popularity of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Piers ANTHONY, and Philip K. DICK,
opened in the summer of 1990.See Also: CINEMA.

Pynchon's Vineland
Thomas PYNCHON publishes Vineland, his first new work in seventeen years.
It contains elements of both fantasy and cyberpunk.See Also: FABULATIONS.

Swanwick's Stations of the Tide
Michael SWANWICK's third novel, STATIONS OF THE TIDE, combines a number
of classic SF themes in a dense, fast-moving, and complex story; it won
the NEBULA Award.

Robinson's Red Mars
The first novel of Kim Stanley ROBINSON's expansive and audacious
trilogy, RED MARS won the NEBULA Award. Its successor, Green Mars, won the
HUGO later that year.

Vinge's A Fire Upon the Deep
Vernor VINGE's expansive novel, A FIRE UPON THE DEEP, combines SPACE
OPERA, CYBERPUNK, and intrigue in a rousing galactic adventure.

Willis's Doomsday Book
TIME TRAVEL has long been a favorite theme of Connie WILLIS.DOOMSDAY
BOOK, her longest work, sends a time traveller to the era of the Black
Death. It won the NEBULA and HUGO Awards.

Jurassic Park opens JURASSIC PARK, Steven SPIELBERG's film of Michael
CRICHTON's novel about resurrected dinosaurs was an enormous popular
success, the highest-grossing film of all time.

Arslan
ENGH, M. J. (Warner, 1976)U.K. title: A Wind From Bukhara 1979Having
already defeated the Soviet Union and the United States in battle, Arslan,
a charismatic young Asian conqueror, personally oversees mopping-up
operations in the American Midwest. Deciding to make a small town in
Illinois his temporary headquarters, Arslan at first rapes and terrorizes
the citizens, but then seduces them by the force of his personality. This
frightening and disconcerting novel features superb character development
and fascinating POLITICAL insights. Compare Sinclair Lewis's It Can't
Happen Here . Engh's recent novel,Rainbow Man (1993), deals with the theme
of personal responsibility in a radically different but equally
fascinating manner.

And Chaos Died
RUSS, JOANNA(Ace, 1970)A castaway on a colony world, whose inhabitants
have been taught telepathy by mysterious aliens, picks up the gift
himself, but then finds himself alienated from ordinary humans, able to
remain sane only among members of what is now his own kind. A determined
attempt to examine psi power from a new angle. Compare Arthur Sellings's
The Uncensored Man (1964). See also ESP

Artificial Things
FOWLER, KAREN JOY(Bantam, 1986)It's rare for a new SF author's first
published book to be a short story collection, but Fowler's polished tales
have had a powerful and immediate impact within the genre. Included are
the hysterically funny "The Faithful Companion at Forty," which gives us
the truth about the Lone Ranger's relationship with Tonto, as well as such
fine pieces as "The Gate of Ghosts,""The View From Venus,""Praxis," and
"The Lake Is Full of Artificial Things." Compare Kate Wilhelm's THE
INFINITY BOX and other collections.

Aegypt
CROWLEY, JOHN(Bantam, 1987)Crowley's lyrical and multileveled meditation
on time, history, and the nature of narrative may seem a combination of
fantasy and contemporary novel, but its inquiry into the meaning of
history and the secret significance of the Renaissance places it within a
tradition of science that also includes Robert Anton Wilson's work and
Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49. Pierce Moffett, a
thirty-four-year-old academic who has "lost his vocation" and also his
university job, moves from Manhattan to the bucolic Blackbury Jambs in the
Faraway Hills, where he attempts to write a book about the traces of
Hermetic thought, once believed to come from the priest-kings of Egypt
("not Egypt but Aegypt"), that persist in modern life. While Moffett muses
about the pyramid on the back of the dollar bill, or why Gypsies are
believed to be able to tell fortunes, he becomes involved both with local
village life and with the life of Fellowes Kraft, a minor historical
novelist of the 40s and 50s whose last, unfinished manuscript Pierce
discovers. The novel strongly hints that Pierce, unknown to himself, is a
voyager from outside this universe, his original mission forgotten when he
took on the torpid garb of physical matter in this gnostic universe.
Crowley's very original and beautifully written novel-the first of a
planned quartet-continues its tale in Love & Sleep(1994). Both Mary
Gentle's Rats and Gargoyles and Michael Shea and Robert Anton Wilson's THE
ILLUMINATUS! TRILOGY deal (in very different ways) with some of Crowley's
themes. (GF) See also HISTORY IN SF and CONCEPTUAL BREAKTHROUGH

Always Coming Home
LE GUIN, URSULA K(ROEBER)(Harper, 1985)An elaborate account of the
culture of the Kesh-people living in "the Valley" in northern California
in a postindustrial future. The main narrative sequence concerns the
experience of a girl fathered on a woman of the Valley by an outsider, but
there is a great wealth of supplementary detail to set this story in
context; the environment, mythology, and arts of the imaginary society are
scrupulously described. A fabulously rich work, the most elaborate
exercise in imaginary ANTHROPOLOGY ever undertaken, even including a
cassette recording. Compare Austin Tappan Wright's Islandia and John
Brunner's STAND ON ZANZIBAR .

Aristoi
WILLIAMS, WALTER JON(Tor, 1992)In the far future, a galaxy-spanning human
empire is ruled by the Aristoi, supercompetent geniuses with vast psychic
powers and sophisticated technological support. Although the rule of the
Aristoi is far from democratic, humanity has achieved unprecedented
comfort and harmony under them. When the Aristo Gabriel uncovers a plot to
overthrow the system from within, he takes it upon himself to defeat the
traitors. This is a beautifully written, morally complex novel, that
explores the nature of personal power and its ability to corrupt. Compare
Michael Moorcock's The Dancers at the End of Times . See also
NANOTECHNOLOGY

Ambient
WOMACK, JACK(Weidenfeld, 1987)In a future milieu as gritty and dark as
that of the cyberpunks, but minus their ubiquitous computer technology,
the Dryco Corporation dominates the world through its control of the
recreational drug market. The various members of the Dryden family, owners
of Dryco, seem to be involved in endless, borderline-psychotic plots to
increase their power over the world around them. Later books in the
series, not all of which are tightly connected to Ambient, include
Terraplane (1988), Heathern (1990), and Elvissey (1993). Womack's books
are difficult because he writes in a futuristic slang, much as Anthony
Burgess did in A CLOCKWORK ORANGE. See also DYSTOPIAS

After Things Fell Apart
GOULART, RON(Ace, 1970)A detective pursues a gang of feminist assassins
through the eccentric subcultures of a balkanized future United States.
The best of the author's many HUMORous SF novels, with a genuine satirical
element to add to the usual slapstick. Compare Robert Sheckley's Journey
Beyond Tomorrow (1962).

Alyx
RUSS, JOANNA(Gregg Press, 1976) Variant title: The Adventures of
AlyxIncorporates the novel Picnic on Paradise (1968) with four short
stories featuring the same heroine. Alyx's native land is the cradle of
civilization, where she is an outlaw because her ideas are so far ahead of
her time, but in the novel she is snatched out of context to become a time
traveling agent charged with rescuing a group of tourists trapped on a
resort planet where local politics have turned sour. Clever and lively.
Another similar novel is The Two of Them (1978), in which a female agent
is dispatched to a quasi-lslamic world where she rescues a girl from a
harem. See also FEMINISM

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, July 1929 / Vol. 1, No. 1 Published by Stellar
Publishing Corp. Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of
Frank R. Paul. (c) 1929 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Algol
Algol, Summer-Fall 1977 Published by Andrew I. Porter Cover illustration
by Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1977
by ALGOL MAGAZINE)

Alien Critic
Alien Critic, Nov. 1973 / Vol. 2, No. 4 Published by Richard E. Geis
Cover illustration by Stephen Fabian (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1973 Richard E. Geis)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, June 1947 Published by TSR Inc. Cover illustration by
Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c) 1947 TSR, Inc.)

Ansible
Ansible, Oct. 1984 Published by David Langford (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1984 David Langford)

Ariel: The Book of Fantasy
Ariel: The Book of Fantasy, 1977 / No. 2 Published by The Morning Star
Press Cover illustration by Frank Frazetta (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. The Morning Star Press. (c) 1977
The Morning Star Press)

Arkham Sampler
Arkham Sampler, Winter 1949, #5 / Vol. 2, No. 1 Published by Arkham House
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1949 by
Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Astonishing Stories
Astonishing Stories, March 1942 Published by Fictioneers, Inc. Cover
illustration by H.W. Wesso (Reprinted by permission of Argosy
Communications, Inc. (c) 1942 Fictioneers, Inc.)

Authentic Science Fiction
Authentic Science Fiction, March 1953 Published by Hamilton & Co.
(Stafford) Ltd. Cover illustration by Richards (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1953 Hamilton & Co.)

Avon Fantasy Reader
Avon Fantasy Reader, No. 9 Published by Avon Books (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) Avon Books)

All Our Tomorrows
All Our Tomorrows by Ted Allbeury Cover: Warner Books/Mysterious Press,
1989 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1989 Mysterious Press. )

Accommodation Offered
Accommodation Offered by Anna Livia Cover: Women's Press, 1985 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of The
Women's Press, London. (c) 1985 The Women's Press)

Atta
Atta by Francis Bellamy Cover: A.A. Wyn, Inc., 1953 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. A.A. Wyn, Inc. (c) 1953 A.A.
Wyn, Inc.)

Atlantida
Atlantida by Pierre Benoit Cover: Duffield & Co., 1920 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

And Having Writ. . .
And Having Writ. . . by D.R. Benson Cover: Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1978 (First
Printing) illustration by Bill Tinker (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Bobbs-Merril Co. (c) 1978 Bobbs - Merrill Co.)

American Book of the Dead, The
The American Book of the Dead by Stephen Billias Cover: Popular Library,
1987 (First Printing) illustration by Gary Ruddell (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner
Books, Inc. (c) 1987 Popular Library, Inc.)

Adam Link , Robot
Adam Link, Robot by Eando Binder (Otto Oscar Binder) Cover: Paperback
Library, Inc., 1965 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside.Paperback Library (c) 1965 Paperback Library, Inc.)

After the Cataclysm
After the Cataclysm by H. Percy Blanchard Cover: Cochrane Publishing Co.,
1909 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Airship Nine
Airship Nine by Thomas H. Block Cover: Berkley Books, 1984 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1984 The Berkley Publishing Group Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Aerial Burglars, The
The Aerial Burglars by James Blyth Cover: Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd., 1906
illustration by Harold Piffard (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Aleph, The
The Aleph by Jorge Luis Borges Cover: Bantam, 1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971
Bantam Books)

After the Good War
After the Good War by Peter Breggin Cover: Stein and Day, 1972 (First
Edition) illustration by Tim Gaydos (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Stein and Day. (c) 1972 Stein and Day)

Auroraphone, The
The Auroraphone by Cyrus Cole Cover: Chas. H. Kerr & Co., 1890 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Ape of London, The
The Ape of London by Frank R. Crisp Cover: Hodder and Stoughton, 1959
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1959 Hodder and Stoughton)

Around a Distant Star
Around a Distant Star by Jean Delaire Cover: Jonn Long, 1904 illustration
by Alfred Touchemolin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Asylum Earth
Asylum Earth by Bruce Elliott Cover: Belmont Books, 1968 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Belmont Books . (c) 1968
Belmont Books)

Arslan
Arslan by M.J. Engh Cover: Warner Books, 1976 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1976 Warner Books, Inc.)

Avenger #1: Justice, Inc., The
The Avenger #1: Justice, Inc. by Paul Ernst Cover: Paperback Library,
1972 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside.Paperback Library (c) 1972 Paperback Library)

A.D. 2000
A.D. 2000 by Alvarado Fuller Cover: Laird & Lee Publishers, 1890 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Angels & Visitations
Angels & Visitations Neil Gaiman Cover: Dream Haven Press, 1993 (First
Edition) illustration by David McKean (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1993 Dream Haven Press)

Abyss of Light, An
An Abyss of Light by Kathleen O'Neal Gear Cover: Donald A. Wollheim, 1990
(First Edition) illustration by San Julian (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1990 Donald A. Wollheim)

Angel Island
Angel Island by Inez Haynes Gillmore Cover: Henry Holt, 1914 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Amphibion's Voyage, The
The Amphibion's Voyage by Parker Gillmore Cover: W.H. Allen, 1885 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Armageddon 190
Armageddon 190 by Ferdinand H. Grautoff Cover: Kegan Paul, Trench
Trubner, 1907 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Angel of the Revolution, The
The Angel of the Revolution by George Griffin Cover: Tower, 1894 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Angilin
Angilin by A.L. Hallen Cover: Digby Long, 1907 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Away from the Here and Now
Away from the Here and Now by Clare Winger Harris Cover: Dorrance & Co.,
1947 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c)
1947 Dorrance & Co.)

Autopsy for a Cosmonaut
Autopsy for a Cosmonaut by Jacob Hay Cover: Popular Library, 1969 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1969 Popular Library, Inc.)

Anvil of the Heart
Anvil of the Heart by Bruce T. Holmes Cover: The Haven Corp., 1983 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1983 The Haven
Corporation)

Alien Perspective
Alien Perspective by David Houston Cover: Leisure Books, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1978 Leisure
Books)

Almuric
Almuric by Robert E. Howard Cover: Ace Books, 1964 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1964 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

After London
After London by Richard Jefferies Cover: Cassell & Co., 1885 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

After the Flood
After the Flood by P.C. Jersild Cover: William Morrow & Co., 1982 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1982 William Morrow & Co.,
Inc.)

Archer's Goon
Archer's Goon by Diana Wynne Jones Cover: Berkley, 1987 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Aleriel or a Voyage to Other Worlds
Aleriel or a Voyage to Other Worlds by W.S. Lach-Szyrma Cover: Wyman &
Sons, 1883 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
)

Amazing Mister Lutterworth, The
The Amazing Mister Lutterworth by Desmond Leslie Cover: Brown, Watson
Ltd., 1958 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1958 Brown Watson Ltd.)

Anti-Grav Unlimited
Anti-Grav Unlimited by Duncan Long Cover: Avon Books, 1968 illustration
by Ron Walotsky (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1988 Avon Books)

Ambrov Keon
Ambrov Keon by Jean Lorrah Cover: DAW Books, 1986 illustration by Walter
Valez (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1986 DAW Books, Inc.)

Adrift in the Stratosphere
Adrift in the Stratosphere by A.M. Low Cover: Blackie & Son Ltd., 1937
illustration by George W. Blow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1937 Blackie & Son Ltd.)

Arachne
Arachne by Lisa Mason Cover: William Morrow & Co., 1990 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1990 William Morrow & Co.,
Inc.)

Arsenal out of Time, The
The Arsenal out of Time by David McDaniel Cover: Ace Books, 1967
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Architects of Hyperspace, The
The Architects of Hyperspace by Thomas McDonough Cover: Avon Books, 1987
illustration by Ron Walotsky (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of
Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1987 Avon Books)

Ant-Men, The
The Ant-Men by Eric North Cover: John C. Winston (First Edition)
illustration by Paul Blaisdell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. John C. Winston Company. )

Alien Skies
Alien Skies by Peter Dagmar (Frank J. Pinchin) Cover: Brown, Watson Ltd.,
1962 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Brown Watson Limited. (c) 1962 Brown Watson Ltd.)

Argus Gambit, The
The Argus Gambit by David D. Ross Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by Rats Patterson and the Flying Salvucci's (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Cover: Rats
Patterson and the Flying Salvucci's. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c)
1989 St. Martin's Press)

Alongside Night
Alongside Night by J. Neil Schulman Cover: Ace Books, 1982 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1982 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Agent of Entropy
Agent of Entropy by Martin Siegel Cover: Lancer Books, 1969 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lancer Books. (c)
1969 Lancer Books.)

Adam Experiment, The
The Adam Experiment by Geoffrey Simmons Cover: Berkley, 1979 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1979 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Adrift in a Boneyard
Adrift in a Boneyard by Robert Lewis Taylor Cover: Avon Books, 1947
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1947 Avon Books)

Absolute Zero
Absolute Zero by Ernest Tidyman Cover: Dial, 1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971 Dial
Press)

Agent of Byzantium
Agent of Byzantium by Harry Turtledove Cover: Congdon & Weed, 1988 (M. M.
Kavanagh. Congdon & Weed. (c) 1988 Congdon and Weed.)

Amber City, The
The Amber City by Thomas Vetch Cover: Biggs & Debenham (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Biggs & Debenham. )

Ark, The
The Ark by Jarl Szydlow (Mary Vigliante) Cover: Manor Books, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Manor Books (c)
1978 Manor Books.)

Anno Domini 2000
Anno Domini 2000 by Julius Vogel Cover: Hutchinson & Co. (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random Century House UK Limited. )

Address: Centauri
Address: Centauri by F.L. Wallace Cover: Gnome, 1955 illustration by Ed
Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside.Gnome Press (c) 1955 Gnome)

Angry Espers, The
The Angry Espers by Lloyd Biggle, Jr. Cover: Ace Books, 1961 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1961 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Architect of Sleep, The
The Architect of Sleep by Steven R. Boyett Cover: Ace Books, 1986
illustration by James Gurney (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Alien from Arcturus
Alien from Arcturus by Gordon R. Dickson Cover: Ace Books, 1959 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1959 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

At the Seventh Level
At the Seventh Level by Suzette Haden Elgin Cover: DAW Books, 1972 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1972 DAW Books, Inc.)

Arsenal of Miracles, The
The Arsenal of Miracles by Gardner Fox Cover: Ace Books, 1964 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1964 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Alien Planet
Alien Planet by Fletcher Pratt Cover: Ace Books, 1962 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1962 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Aquarian Attack, The
The Aquarian Attack by Kevin Randle & Robert Cornett Cover: Ace Books,
1989 illustration by Miro (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1989 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

And Chaos Died
And Chaos Died by Joanna Russ Cover: Ace Books, 1970 (First Edition)
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Anita
Anita by Keith Roberts Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) illustration by
George Ziel (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1970 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Alien Light, An
An Alien Light by Nancy Kress Cover: Arbor House (First Edition)
illustration by Ron Walotsky (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of
William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1988 Arbor House)

Armageddon 2419
Armageddon 2419 by Philip Francis Nowlan Cover: Ace Books, 1963
illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1963 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Arthur War Lord
Arthur War Lord by Dafydd ab Hugh Cover: Avon Books, 1994 (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1994 Avon Books)

Armageddon Blues, The
The Armageddon Blues by Daniel Keys Moran Cover: Bantam, 1988
illustration by Jim Burns (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1988 Bantam Books)

Adventures of Terra Tarkington, The
The Adventures of Terra Tarkington by Sharon Webb Cover: Bantam, 1985
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1985 Bantam Books)

Alien Tongue
Alien Tongue by Stephen Leigh Cover: Bantam (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Alien Earth
Alien Earth by Megan Lindholm Cover: Bantam (First Edition) illustration
by Chichoni (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Artificial Things
Artificial Things by Karen Joy Fowler Cover: Bantam, 1986 (First Edition)
illustration by Tito Salomoni (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1986 Bantam Books)

Aegypt
Aegypt by John Crowley Cove: Bantam, 1987 (First Edition) illustration by
Ed Lindlof (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division
of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Assemblers of Infinity
Assemblers of Infinity by Kevin J. Anderson & Doug Beason Cover: Bantam,
1993 (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1993 Bantam
Books)

Agent of Byzantium
Agent of Byzantium by Harry Turtledove Cover: Congdon & Weed, 1987
illustration by Gerry Hawkins (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Congdon & Weed. (c) 1987 Congdon and Weed.)

Authentic Touch, The
The Authentic Touch by Jack Wodhams Cover: Curtis/Modern Library
Editions, 1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Curtis Modern Library Editions. (c) 1971 Curtis Modern Library
Editions)

As the Curtain Falls
As the Curtain Falls by Rob Chilson Cover: DAW Books, 1974 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1974 DAW Books, Inc.)

Angel with the Sword
Angel with the Sword by C.J. Cherryh Cover: DAW Books, 1985 (First
Edition) illustration by Kenneth May (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1985 DAW Books, Inc.)

Algorithm
Algorithm by Jean Mark Gawron Cover: Doubleday, 1978 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1978 Doubleday)

Agency, The
The Agency by David Meltzer Cover: Essex House, 1968 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Essex House. (c) 1968 Essex
House)

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll Cover: Macmillan, 1865
(First Edition) illustration by John Tenniel (M. M. Kavanagh. )

Alien Accounts
Alien Accounts by John T. Sladek Cover: Granada (First Edition)
illustration by Tim White (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1982 Granada)

Altered States
Altered States by Paddy Chayefski Cover: Bantam, 1979 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979
Bantam Books)

Atrocity Exhibition, The
The Atrocity Exhibition J.G. Ballard Cover: Panther Books, 1969 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1969 Panther Books)

Angry Planet, The
The Angry Planet by John Keir Cross Cover: Lunn/Coward-McCann Inc., 1946
(First Edition) illustration by Robin Jacques (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lunn [UK] (c) 1946 Lunn (UK).)

Adventures of Doctor Eszterhazy, The
The Adventures of Doctor Eszterhazy by Avram Davidson Cover: Owlswick,
1990 (First Edition) illustration by George Barr (M. M. Kavanagh. Owlswick
Press (c) 1990 Owlswick Press.)

Adventures in Unhistory
Adventures in Unhistory by Avram Davidson Cover: Owlswick, 1993 (First
Edition) illustration by George Barr (M. M. Kavanagh. Owlswick Press. (c)
1993 Owlswick Press.)

Air Trust, The
The Air Trust by George Allan England Cover: Phil Wagner, 1915
illustration by John Sloan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

After the Zap
After the Zap by Michael Armstrong Cover: Popular Library, 1987
illustration by Les Edwards (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1987
Popular Library)

Alicia II
Alicia II by Robert Thurston Cover: Berkley, 1978 (First Edition)
illustration by Norm Walker (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1978 The Berkley Publishing Group.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Autumn Angels
Autumn Angels by Arthur Byron Cover Cover: Pyramid Books (First Edition)
illustration by Ron Cobb (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1975 Pyramid Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Alternate Presidents
Alternate Presidents ed. by Mike Resnick Cover: TOR (First Edition)
illustration by Barclay Shaw (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books.)

Alternate Kennedys
Alternate Kennedys ed. by Mike Resnick Cover: TOR (First Edition)
illustration by Barclay Shaw (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books.)

Aristoi
Aristoi by Walter Jon Williams Cover: TOR, 1992 (First Edition)
illustration by Jim Burns (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor
Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books.)

Agyar
Agyar by Steven Brust Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration by Jim
Burns (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1993 Tor
Books.)

Alternate Warriors
Alternate Warriors ed. by Mike Resnick Cover: TOR (First Edition)
illustration by Barclay Shaw (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1993 Tor Books.)

Alternate Outlaws
Alternate Outlaws ed. by Mike Resnick Cover: TOR (First Edition)
illustration by Barclay Shaw (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1994 Tor Books.)

Archivist, The
The Archivist by Gil Alderman Cover: Unwin Hyman (First Edition)
illustration by Lee Gibbons (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1989 Unwin Hyman)

All About Strange Monsters of the Recent Past
All About Strange Monsters of the Recent Past by Howard Waldrop Cover:
Ursus, 1987 (First Edition) illustration by Don Ivan Punchatz (M. M.
Kavanagh. Ursus Imprints. (c) 1987 Ursus Imprints)

Ambient
Ambient by Jack Womack Cover: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1987 (First Edition)
illustration by David Shannon (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Grove /
Atlantic, Inc. (c) 1987 Weidenfeld & Nicolson.)

A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine
A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine, Feb. 1950 / Vol. 1, No. 2 Published by
Recreational Reading, Inc. Cover illustration by Lawrence Sterne Stevens
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by permission of Argosy Communications, Inc. Copyright 1950 Recreational
Reading, Inc.)

A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine
A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine, April 1950 / Vol. 1, No. 3 Published by
Recreational Reading, Inc. Cover illustration by Norman Saunders (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Argosy Communications, Inc. and Mrs. Norman Saunders.
Copyright 1950 Recreational Reading, Inc.)

A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine
A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine, July 1950 / Vol. 1, No. 4 Published by
Recreational Reading, Inc. Cover illustration by Norman Saunders (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Argosy Communications, Inc. and Mrs. Norman Saunders.
Copyright 1950 Recreational Reading, Inc.)

A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine
A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine, Oct. 1950 / Vol. 2, No. 1 Published by
Recreational Reading, Inc. Cover illustration by Norman Saunders (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Argosy Communications, Inc. and Mrs. Norman Saunders.
Copyright 1950 Recreational Reading, Inc.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, Oct. 1929 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1929
Stellar Publising Corp.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, Jan. 1930 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c) 1930 Stellar Publising Corp.)

After Things Fell Apart
After Things Fell Apart by Ron Goulart Cover: Ace Books, 1970 (First
Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Anubis Gates, The
The Anubis Gates by Tim Powers Cover: Ace Books, 1983 (First Edition)
illustration by Don Brautigan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1983 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, Feb. 1930 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp. Cover
illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c) 1930
Stellar Publising Corp.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, Aug. 1929 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp. Cover
illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c) 1929
Stellar Publising Corp.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, March 1930 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp.
Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c)
1930 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, Nov. 1929 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp. Cover
illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c) 1929
Stellar Publising Corp.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, Sept. 1929 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp.
Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c)
1929 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, April 1926 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1926 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Sept. 1929 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1929 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, May 1929 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1929 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Jan. 1929 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1929 TSR, Inc.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Jan. 1930 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1930 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1957
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, April 1930 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1930 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1957
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Sept. 1934 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1934 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1961
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, June 1936 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1936 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1963
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Sept. 1941 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1941 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1968
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Aug. 1942 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1942 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1969
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Feb. 1940 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1940 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1967
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Jan. 1944 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1944 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1971
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Nov. 1928 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1928 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Aug. 1927 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1927 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Aug. 1928 Published by TSR, Inc. Cover illustration by
Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c) 1928 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Sept., 1928 Published by TSR, Inc. Cover illustration by
Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c) 1928 TSR, Inc.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, April 1942 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1942 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1969
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Absolute Magnitude
Absolute Magnitude, Spring 1995 / No.2 Published by DNA Publications
(M.M. Kavanagh. Cover: Bob Eggleton. Reprinted with permission of DNA
Publications. (c) DNA Publications)

Analog Science Fiction Science Fact
Analog Science Fiction Science Fact, April 1972 Published by Conde Nast
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Dell Magazines, Inc. All rights
reserved (c) 1972 by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by
permission of Dell Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Sept. 1972 Published by TSR, Inc. Cover illustration by
Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c) 1972 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Nov. 1927 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1927 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, Oct. 1927 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1927 TSR, Inc.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, June 1927 Published by TSR, Inc. Cover illustration by
Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c) 1927 TSR, Inc.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, April 1930 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp.
Cover illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c)
1930 Stellar Publising Corp.)

Air Wonder Stories
Air Wonder Stories, May 1930 Published by Stellar Publishing Corp. Cover
illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul. (c) 1930
Stellar Publising Corp.)

Amazing Stories
Amazing Stories, June 1926 Published by TSR, Inc. Cover illustration by
Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c) 1926 TSR, Inc.)

Allen, Roger MacBride
Roger MacBride Allen (1957- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Anderson, Poul
Poul Anderson (1926- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Anthony, Piers
Piers Anthony (1934- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Adams, Douglas
Douglas Adams (1952- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Asimov, Isaac
Isaac Asimov (1920-1992) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Aldiss, Brian W.
Brian W. Aldiss (1925- ) (Marisa D'Alessandro. (c) 1995 Marisa
D'Alessandro)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Aug. 1947 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1947 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1974
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Jan. 1950 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1950 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1977
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Aldiss, Brian (Helliconia Spring)
Brian Aldiss creates the seasons for Helliconia Spring. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Aldiss, Brian (Helliconia Spring)
Brian Aldiss creates the seasons for Helliconia Spring. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Asimov, Isaac (Preparing for the Future)
Isaac Asimov discusses how we have to gamble on the ability of technology
to solve problems - we have no other choice. ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Asimov, Isaac (Preparing for the Future)
Isaac Asimov discusses how we have to gamble on the ability of technology
to solve problems - we have no other choice. ( (c) Grolier Electronic
Publishing, Inc.)

Aliens
The recipe for creating an Alien: bells, whistles, and Hubert Humphrey. (
(c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Artificial Intelligence
What will happen when machines are smarter than we are? SF writers
discuss the pitfalls of creating machines with superior intelligence. (
(c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, Oct. 1940 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1940 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1967
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Auel, Jean M.
Jean M. Auel (1936- ) (John Emmerling. (c) 1985 John Emmerling)

Attack of the Crab Monsters
Despite being made cheaply by Roger Corman, Attack of the Crab Monsters
(Los Altos/Allied Artists, 1957) is one of the best of the many 1950s
movies to deal with the giant vermin created by atomic bomb tests. (Ronald
V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Alphaville
Despite its talk of intergalactic secret agents and supercomputers,
Jean-Luc Godard's film,Alphaville (Pathe-contemporary/Chaumiane-Film,
1965), is only nominally science fiction. Its New Wave combination of film
genres- film noir and crime elements are as prominent as the SF ones-
operate in service of an allegory about modern life. As such, it has more
in common with Godard's later film,Weekend, than with any other movie
about interstellar intrigue. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Attack of the 50-ft. Woman
The poster for the original version ofAttack of the 50-ft. Woman (Allied
Artists, 1958) may be the best thing about the film, although some have
seen positive value in its potential as a metaphor for female empowerment.
(Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Aelita
The Queen of Mars, caught in a sportive mood, looks rather like a flapper
in Aelita (Mezhrabpom, 1924). The Expressionist set style is here clearly
apparent and is said to have influenced the design of the Flash Gordon
series. (The Everett Collection, Inc. )

Astounding Science Fiction
Astounding Science Fiction, June 1932 Published by Street & Smith
Publications (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1932 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., (c) renewed 1959
by Conde Nast Publications, Inc., reprinted by permission of Dell
Magazines, Inc. All rights reserved)

Acknowledgments
From The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, John Clute and Peter Nicholls,
eds.We must first thank all the contributors, to both the first edition
and the current edition. We thank especially our Contributing Editor,
Brian Stableford, whose influence extended far beyond the 200,000 words
signed with his initials, for his tasks included a severe examination of
the entire text for errors of fact and critical blunders. We thank our
Technical Editor, Paul Barnett, whose logistic and computer skills brought
this book into publishable shape, and whose editing skills importantly
influenced its language and form. We thank our proof-reader, Lydia
Darbyshire, a model of meticulousness whose examination of data for
consistency was itself tantamount to a critical reading of the text. We
thank also all those sf authors and critics who took the time to fill out
a questionnaire or otherwise provided us with vital information. We also
thank John Jarrold, the original commissioner of this volume.It is not
possible individually to thank all those who helped in other ways, for the
list would contain some hundreds of names. It goes without saying that we
remain grateful to all those we thanked in the preface to the first
edition, and we do not repeat their names here. Of the large number who
helped us with the current edition, there are some in particular whose
extensive help we must comment on. Neil Barron, whose reference books were
among those we most often consulted, provided us with much other
information and with constant encouragement. Everett F. Bleiler, who read
critically many parts of the encyclopedia that pertained to his areas of
particular expertise, generously contributed to it - out of his deep love
for the subject - several substantial entries on early sf and sf writers.
His son, Richard Bleiler, also altruistically contributed advice and
entries, as did Professor I.F. Clarke. Judith Clute kept John Clute alive,
while painting in the next room. Clare Coney (Nicholls) provided not only
support well beyond the call of wifely duty but also considerable
editorial assistance. J. Fisher provided much biographical data on
authors, along with other suggestions. Hal W. Hall generously provided
research materials. Steve Holland helped us make sense of the bibliography
of 1950s sf in the UK. Roz Kaveney commented on hundreds of author entries
as they were drafted, and then read the manuscript. David Langford gave
essential computer advice and help, made many suggestions throughout, and
read the manuscript. Helen Nicholls understood her brother and her friend.
Robert Reginald, author of the basic and essential checklist of sf
literature from 1700 to 1974 (see below), made available successive drafts
of his 1975-1991 supplement (now just published), and we supplied him in
turn with final drafts of this encyclopedia. John Clute read and
criticized the checklist; Reginald did the same for the encyclopedia. We
are all hoping that both books show the benefits of this sharing of
resources.Others whose help was substantial (often in locating
hard-to-find data, and in setting us right on first-edition errors)
include Paul Alkon, Brian Ameringen, Mike Ashley, Nick Austin, John
Betancourt, Jenny Blackford, Damien Broderick, John F. Carr, T.G.
Cockcroft, Michael Rice Colpitts, Ian Covell, Richard Dalby, John Dallman,
John Davey, Joyce Day, Jane Donawerth, Nann du Sautoy, John Eggeling, Alex
Eisenstein, Alan C. Elms, Brian Forte, Andrew Fraknoi, D. Douglas Fratz,
Neil Gaiman, Martin Gardner, C.N. Gilmore, Mark Goldberg, Paul Gravett,
Scott Green, the Reverend Ron Grossman, Rob Hansen, David Hartwell,
Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Richard J. Hooton, Maxim Jakubowski, Laurence M.
Janifer, Don Keller, David Ketterer, Michael Klossner, Justin Knowles,
Eleanor Lang, Anthony R. Lewis, Duncan Lunan, Kerzin Alexey Lvovich,
Patrick McGuire, Murray MacLachlan, Sean McMullen, Barry N. Malzberg, Lee
Mendham, Walter E. Meyers, Chris Morgan, Caroline Mullan, Alan Myers, Kim
Newman, John C. Nine, Jaroslav Olsa jr, Jan O'Nale, Bernie Peek, Dominique
Petitfaux, Andrew Porter, David Pringle, Jenny Randles, Kim Stanley
Robinson, Roger Robinson, Cornel Robu, Yvonne Rousseau, Darrell
Schweitzer, the Science Fiction Foundation, A. Langley Searles, Efim Shur,
Cyril Simsa, John Sladek, John B. Spencer, Phil Stephensen-Payne, Darko
Suvin, Braulio Tavares, Sheldon Teitelbaum, Ron Tiner, Igor Tolokonnikov,
Ian Watson, Bob Wayne, Janeen Webb, Andrew Wille, Madawc Williams, G.
Peter Winnington, and Zoran Zivkovic.In the first edition it was still
possible to acknowledge individually the reference books that formed the
basis of our research library. There are now too many, though perhaps we
can select a few which were of special and continuous use: Neil Barron's
Anatomy of Wonder, Fantasy Literature and Horror Literature; Everett F.
Bleiler's Science Fiction: The Early Years; the annual sf/fantasy
bibliographies edited by Charles N. Brown and William G. Contento for
Locus Press; Thomas D. Clareson's Science Fiction in America, 1870s-1930s;
the sf and fantasy book-review annuals compiled by Robert A. Collins and
Robert Latham; William G. Contento's indexes to sf anthologies and
collections; L.W. Currey's Science Fiction and Fantasy Authors: A
Bibliography of First Printings of their Fiction; Donald B. Day's Index to
the Science Fiction Magazines 1926-50; Hal W. Hall's various guides to sf
book reviews and research papers; Phil Hardy's The Aurum Film
Encyclopedia: Science Fiction; George Locke's A Spectrum of Fantasy; the
NESFA sf-magazine indexes covering publications subsequent to 1965; Robert
Reginald's Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature: A Checklist, 1700-1974
and Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature, 1975-1991; Erwin S. Strauss's
Index to the S-F Magazines, 1951-65; Darko Suvin's Victorian Science
Fiction in the UK; Donald H. Tuck's Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and
Fantasy through 1968; Marshall B. Tymn's and Mike Ashley's Science
Fiction, Fantasy and Weird Fiction Magazines; the two volumes of Bill
Warren's Keep Watching the Skies; Robert Weinberg's A Biographical
Dictionary of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists.We end by issuing a
conventional but heartfelt apology and thanks to all those others who have
helped and have not appeared on the above lists.John Clute and Peter
Nicholls

Atterley's Voyage to the Moon
In A Voyage to the Moon, a scientifically detailed and rationalized
account of a trip to the Moon, Joseph ATTERLEY invents the idea of
antigravity propulsion.

Abbott's Flatland
Edwin Abbott's novel, FLATLAND: A ROMANCE OF MANY DIMENSIONS, is short on
plot but playfully dramatizes mathematical concepts in a manner that
remains readable today.

Aerial bombardments foreseen
H.G. WELLS 's The War in the Air foresaw a ruinous world WAR, involving
aerial bombardments and guerilla warfare.

Amazing Stories founded
Hugo GERNSBACK, always more interested in science than in fiction, had
earlier edited Modern Electrics before launching his brainchild, Amazing
Stories. Gernsback coined the term "scientifiction" to describe the tale
of future science he wanted to publish.See Also: DEFINITIONS OF SF.

Ace Specials series
Terry CARR convinced ACE Books to allow him to edit a line of ambitious,
attractively packaged SF novels; the Ace Specials included some of the
best American SF of the late Sixties.

Asimov's first robot story
Isaac ASIMOVpublishes" Reason", his first ROBOTstory, at the age of
twenty. Its title suggests Asimov's rationalistic approach to a lurid
genre theme.

Asimov 's Nightfall
Isaac ASIMOV was only twenty-one when he published this story in
Astounding Science Fiction. It has become one of the most famous stories
in modern science fiction.See Also: Nightfall by Robert SILVERBERG.

Asimov 's Foundation
Published as a series of novelettes and short novels throughout the
1940s, Isaac ASIMOV's FOUNDATION series became a trilogy upon book
publication a decade later.See Also: GALACTIC EMPIRES; HISTORY.

Ace Books founded
Famous for its Doubles, ACE BOOKS never possessed the prestige of
Ballantine or Bantam, but published a large number of important books in
the fifties and sixties.

Anderson's Brain Wave
Poul ANDERSON's early novel about a change that increases the
intelligence of every creature on Earth is a sensitive and persuasively
understated novel.

Anderson's Call Me Joe
Poul ANDERSON's early novella shows his characteristic strengths in
developing character, setting, and narrative, and it anticipates his later
long stories.

Aldiss's Greybeard
A melancholy, meditative post-holocaust novel, GREYBEARD has never been
greatly popular in the US, but may be Brian ALDISS's finest novel.

Ace Specials series
Terry CARR convinced ACE Books to allow him to edit a line of ambitious,
attractively packaged SF novels; the Ace Specials included some of the
best American SF of the late Sixties.

Asimov's The Gods Themselves
"THE GODS THEMSELVES", Isaac ASIMOV's first novel in sixteen years was a
major event in 1972. Its imaginative virtuosity surprised many readers,
and it won the NEBULA and the HUGO Awards.

Asimov's The Bicentennial Man
This is certainly the finest piece of short fiction Isaac ASIMOV wrote
after the 1950s. It won numerous awards and has been widely reprinted.

Asimov's SF Magazine
As GALAXY SCIENCE FICTION was dying, ISAAC ASIMOV'SSCIENCE FICTION
MAGAZINE rose to replace it, becoming the most consistent and reliable SF
magazine of the 1980s.

Alien
ALIEN opens, creating an audience for a darker, high-tech SF film than
those of George LUCAS and Steven SPIELBERG.See Also: CINEMA.

Aldiss's Helliconia Spring
Brian ALDISS's most substantial effort in world-building, the HELLICONIA
trilogy was a British best-seller and an imaginative triumph.See Also:
PLANETARY ROMANCE.

Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale
Known primarily as a contemporary novelist and poet, Margaret ATWOOD
produced THE HANDMAID'S TALE, a genuine SF DYSTOPIA of religious
fanaticism. The book became the basis of the 1990 film of the same name.

A. Merrit's Fantasy Magazine
A. Merrit's Fantasy Magazine, Dec. 1949 / Vol. 1, No. 1 Published by
Recreational Reading, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Argosy Communications, Inc.
(c) 1949 Recreational Reading, Inc.)

Archer's Goon
Archer's Goon by Diana Wynne Jones Cover: Berkley, 1987 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Babel-17
DELANY, SAMUEL R(AY)( Ace, 1966)An unorthodox heroine must come to terms
with an artificial language whose constraints on thought and behavior make
it an effective weapon of war. Clever, colorful, and highly original; it
updates and sophisticates the theme of Jack Vance's The Language of Pao.
Compare also Ian Watson's THE EMBEDDING. NW, 1966. See also LINGUISTICS

Bone Dance: A Fantasy for Technophiles
BULL, EMMA( Ace, 1991)Sparrow, a sexless, artificial person who makes a
living tracking down and selling videos and other aging technological
artifacts in punked-out, postnuclear war Minneapolis, accidentally becomes
involved with the Horsemen, U.S. government-developed secret agents
capable of entering the minds of others. In the past the Horsemen were
secretly used to destabilize foreign governments until their actions
triggered the nuclear war; now they serve other masters, and Sparrow,
simply having discovered their existence, is at risk. To complicate
matters, there is evidence that at least some of what's going on is
supernatural, rather than merely weird science. Bull's world is gritty,
well realized, and a lot of fun. For a variant on the possession motif,
see Pat Cadigan's Fools. See also HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

Bug Jack Barron
SPINRAD, NORMAN(Walker, 1969)A TV personality makes a powerful enemy when
he attacks a plutocrat who is trying to develop an immortality treatment.
Taboo-breaking in its day because of its sexual frankness and extravagant
cynicism; remains significant as an early examination of the growing media
and their manipulators. Compare Bruce Sterling's The Artificial Kid
(1980). See also MEDIA LANDSCAPE

Bring the Jubilee
MOORE, WARD(Farrar, 1953)With the possible exception of Sir Winston
Churchill's brilliant essay in If, or History Rewritten, this is far and
away the best story ever written on the theme of the South having won the
Civil War. Moore's fine historical sense led him to describe some perhaps
unexpected consequences; in a less affluent North the presidency is won
three times by William Jennings Bryan, and in a backlash against the
prewar antislavery movement the Grand Army of the Republic, the Union
veterans' organization, becomes a terrorist outfit like the Klan.
Imaginative rethinking of real history; highly recommended. (This
annotator, born and raised in Yankeeland, trembles at the thought of
"Johnston's terrible march to Boston"; serves us right, a staunch Southron
might reply.) See also ALTERNATE WORLDS

Behold the Man
MOORCOCK, MICHAEL(Allison & Busby, 1969)Expanded from a novella (Nebula
winner, 1967). The alienated hero travels back to the time of Christ in
the hope of enlightenment, but he finds Jesus grotesquely ill-fitted to
the role of messiah and must take his place. Darkly ironic; a fascinating
exercise in the PSYCHOLOGY of martyrdom. Compare Barry N. Malzberg's The
Cross of Fire.

Beggars and Choosers
KRESS, NANCY(Tor, 1994)The sequel to Kress's 1993 novel Beggars in Spain
continues the tale of the Sleepless, a strain of genetically altered
humans who need never sleep, and who consequently grow to adulthood
learning faster and better than normal humans. Their cognitive powers make
them virtual SUPERMEN, and the Sleepless outstrip their merely human
siblings in power and achievement, but at the price of provoking a
dangerous resentment. In Beggars and Choosers, set some years later,
humanity has become divided into various genetically-enhanced elites, some
of them scarcely human, and the "Livers"-the great mass of humanity, who
are unable to compete intellectually with these elites and exist in an
enormous restive welfare state. Kress's conscientious, sometimes earnest
prose explores the difficult issues honestly and without melodrama.
Compare Bruce Sterling's SCHISMATRIX and C. J. Cherryh's CYTEEN. (GF) See
also GENETIC ENGINEERING and INTELLIGENCE

Blood Music
BEAR, GREG(Arbor House, 1985)A genetic engineer conducts unauthorized
experiments that result in the creation of intelligent microorganisms.
Having infected himself, he becomes a "universe" of sentient cells, and
when his "disease" becomes epidemic the whole living world undergoes an
astonishing transformation. A brilliant novel, expanded from a novelette
(Hugo winner, 1984) that extends the SF imagination to new horizons.
Compare Arthur C. Clarke's CHILDHOOD'S END and A. A. Attanasio's Radix.
See also NANOTECHNOLOGY

Barrayar
BUJOLD, LOIS MCMASTER(Baen, 1991)Cordelia Naismith and Aral Vorkosigan
were once enemies in an interstellar war. Now a fragile peace has been
established and they're a married couple expecting their first child.
Cordelia, a liberated woman, is ill at ease among the more conservative,
less civilized people of Barrayar and, when her husband is named regent,
she realizes that she, Aral, and their unborn baby are in great danger.
Traditional SPACE OPERA at its very best. Bujold's highly competent first
novel, Shards of Honor (1986), details Cordelia and Aral's first meeting
in the midst of war. Compare C. J. Cherryh's Rimrunners and other novels.
Hugo winner, 1992

Burning Chrome
GIBSON, WILLIAM(Arbor, 1986)Ten short stories by the most innovative new
voice to enter the science fiction field in decades. Included here are
such superb short fictions as "Burning Chrome,""The Winter
Market,""Dogfight" (co-authored with Michael Swanwick), and "Hinterlands,"
as well as collaborations with Bruce Sterling and John Shirley. Several
are award nominees. Many of these stories are set in the sleazy, CYBERPUNK
future made famous in Gibson's novels. Compare Bruce Sterling's CRYSTAL
EXPRESS and Global Head (1992).

Beyond This Horizon
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Fantasy, 1948)Originally in Astounding, 1942.
After society achieves an economy of abundance for all, what do people do
with their time? Especially, how fares the omnicompetent Heinlein hero,
who no longer has anything to challenge him? Themes that would occupy
Heinlein later on, such as the political pitfalls of human genetic
engineering, got a preliminary airing in this novel: also the existential
implications of mortality versus immortality (his tentative solution,
worked out in science fictional rather than occultish terms:
reincarnation). An important early work, toward which a later generation
of criticism has been unfairly condescending. See also UTOPIAS

Brightness Falls From the Air
TIPTREE, JAMES, JR. (pseud. of Alice Sheldon)(Tor, 1985)A thriller in
which a lonely outpost of galactic civilization is taken over by gangsters
while the debris of a nova comes ever closer. The violent oppression
recalls old sins committed and old hurts sustained by the human and alien
characters. Seemingly modeled on the 1948 film Key Largo. Compare C. J.
Cherryh's DOWNBELOW STATION . The Starry Rift (1986), although billed as a
sequel, is actually a collection of three novellas with the same
background, including "The Only Neat Thing to Do. See also SPACE HABITATS"

Brave New World
HUXLEY, ALDOUS (LEONARD)(Doubleday, 1932)A devastating criticism of the
kind of technological utopia outlined in J. B. S. Haldane's essay
"Daedalus; or, Science and the Future." Its principal images are well
established in the modern mythology of the future, and it remains the
definitive critique of the technologically supported "rational" society,
exposing the darker side of scientific humanism. It is a brilliant and
perceptive polemic, and the opposing side of the argument has found no
advocate of comparable eloquence. It stands alongside We and NINETEEN
EIGHTY-FOUR as one of the classic dystopian novels. Many of the concerns
of the novel were treated in a later nonfiction work, Brave New World
Revisited (1958). See also DYSTOPIAS

Best Science Fiction Stories of Brian W. Aldiss
ALDISS, BRIAN W(ILSON)(Faber, 1962)U.S. title: Who Can Replace a Man?
(Harcourt, 1966)Assembling these 16 stories (14 in the earlier editions,
22 in the latest), Aldiss confessed, made him "realise how rapidly change
moves," in SF as in everything else. The stories are arranged in a rough
chronological order which, the author comments, "seems to represent also
an order of complexity." From the straightforwardly told "Who Can Replace
a Man?" (included also in The Canopy of Time ) to the subtlety of "A Kind
of Artistry," or from the hero's anguish at his time-trapped predicament
in "Not For an Age," 1957, to the startlingly nonchalant outlook of a chap
in a somewhat comparable situation in "Man in His Time," 1966, the reader
will perceive the evolutionary process to which Aldiss referred; and yet,
a reader of a generation still further down the road from this book's
publication will find almost all of these stories fresh and
contemporary-sounding, regardless of when they were written.

Buddy Holly Is Alive and Well on Ganymede
DENTON, BRADLEY(Morrow, 1991)Oliver Vale, in his late twenties and not
terribly successful, has spent his entire life acutely aware that his
mother conceived him at the very moment in 1959 when rock star Buddy
Holly's plane crashed in lowa. Now, in 1989, the deceased Holly has
inexplicably begun to appear "live" on every TV set in the world.
Apparently broadcasting from one of Jupiter's moons, he informs the Earth
that Oliver is responsible for Holly's usurpation of the airwaves.
Needless to say, Vale soon ends up on the run, pursued by the police,
angry neighbors, secret agents, his therapist, a cyborg doberman named
Ringo, and some very strange aliens. This is gonzo, ABSURDIST fiction at
its best. For similar delights compare John Kessel's GOOD NEWS FROM OUTER
SPACE .

Beyond Fantasy Fiction
Beyond Fantasy Fiction, July 1953 Published by Galaxy Publishing Corp.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Galaxy
Publishing Corporation. (c) 1953 Galaxy Publishing Corporation)

Beyond Infinity
Beyond Infinity, Dec. 1967 Published by I.D. Publications, Inc. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. I.D. Publications,
Inc. (c) 1967 I.D. Publications, Inc.)

Battle of London, The
The Battle of London by Hugh Addison Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd., 1924
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random House UK Limited. (c) 1924 Herbert Jenkins Ltd.)

Black Oxen
Black Oxen by Gertrude Atherton Cover: Al Burt Co., 1923 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Al Burt Co. (c) 1923 Al Burt
Co.)

Bison of Clay
Bison of Clay by Max Begouen Cover: Longmans, Green & Co., 1926 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Longman's, Green,
& Co. (c) 1926 Longmans, Green & Co.)

But Soft - We Are Observed!
But Soft - We Are Observed! by Hilaire Belloc Cover: Arrowsmith, 1928
illustration by G.K. Chesterton (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Arrowsmith. (c) 1928 Arrowsmith)

Beyond These Suns
Beyond These Suns by Rand LePage (William Henry Bird) Cover: Curtis
Warren Ltd., 1952 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Curtis Warren Ltd. (c) 1952 Curtis Warren Ltd.)

Battle of Dorking, The
The Battle of Dorking by George T. Chesney Cover: Wm. Blackwood and Sons,
1871 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Benedict's Planet
Benedict's Planet by James Corley Cover: The Elmfield Press, 1976
illustration by Josh Kirby (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. The Elmfield Press (c) 1976 The Elmfield Press)

Babel-17
Babel-17 by Samuel R. Delany Cover: Ace Books, 1966 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1966 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Book of the Damned, The
The Book of the Damned by Charles Fort Cover: Ace Books, 1964 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1964 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Barking Dogs
Barking Dogs by Terence Green Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1988 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1988 St. Martin's Press)

Broken Worlds, The
The Broken Worlds by Raymond Harris Cover: Ace Books, 1986 illustration
by Ron Miller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Binary Divine
Binary Divine by John Hartridge Cover: Doubleday, 1970 illustration by
Margo Herr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1970 Doubleday & Co.)

Borrowed Time
Borrowed Time by Alan Hruska Cover: Dial Press, 1984 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1984 Dial Press)

Blake of the Rattlesnake
Blake of the Rattlesnake by Fred T. Jane Cover: Tower Publishing Co.,
Ltd., 1895 illustration by Fred T. Jane (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Blood Sport
Blood Sport by Robert F. Jones Cover: Dell, 1974 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1974 Dell
Books)

Brave Old World
Brave Old World by Hugh Kingsmill Cover: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1936 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1936 Eyre & Spottis-Woode)

Blue Fairy Book, The
The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang Cover: Airmont Publishing, 1969 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Airmont Publishing Co., Inc. - Airmont Books (c) 1969 Airmont Publishing
Company )

Brains of Helle, The
The Brains of Helle by Benfo Mistral (Norman A. Lazenby) Cover: Gannet
Press (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Gannet Press, London.)

By and By
By and By by Edward Maitland Cover: Richard Bentley & Son, 1873 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Richard Bently and Son, London )

Bridge, The
The Bridge by D. Keith Mano Cover: Doubleday, 1973 (First Edition)
illustration by Paul Bacon (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a divisionof Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1973 Doubleday)

Bedsitting Room, The
The Bedsitting Room by Spike Mulligan Cover: Tandem, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1970 Tandem)

Bettyann
Bettyann by Kris Neville Cover: Tower, 1970 (M. M. Kavanagh. Tower Books
(c) 1970 Tower Books)

By the Gods Beloved
By the Gods Beloved by Baroness Orczy Cover: Greening & Co., 1910 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Becoming Alien
Becoming Alien by Rebecca Ore Cover: TOR/Tom Doherty Associates (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1988 Tor Books)

Brain Twister
Brain Twister by Mark Phillips Cover: Pyramid, 1962 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1962 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Bugs
Bugs by Theodore Roszak Cover: Doubleday, 1983 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1983
Doubleday)

Bandersnatch
Bandersnatch by T.E. Ryves Cover: Grey Walls Press, 1950 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Grey Walls
Press (c) 1950 Grey Walls Press)

Book of Stier, The
The Book of Stier by Robin Sanborn Cover: Berkley, 1971 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 Berkley
Medallion. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Beyond the Great South Wall
Beyond the Great South Wall by Frank Savile Cover: Grosset & Dunlap, 1901
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Black No More
Black No More by George S. Schuyler Cover: Macauley Co., 1931 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Macauley Co. (c)
1931 Macauley Co.)

Blue Germ, The
The Blue Germ by Martin Swayne Cover: George H. Doran, 1918 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Beyond the Spectrum
Beyond the Spectrum by Martin Thomas Cover: Brown, Watson Ltd., 1964
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Brown
Watson Limited (c) 1964 Brown Watson Ltd.)

Bird of Time, The
The Bird of Time by Wallace West Cover: Ace Books (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1959 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Breathing Space Only
Breathing Space Only by Wynne N. Whiteford Cover: Ace Books, 1986
illustration by Don Dickson (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Building of Venus Four, The
The Building of Venus Four by Calder Willingham Cover: Manor Books, 1977
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Manor Books
(c) 1977 Manor Books)

Beneath the Planet of the Apes
Beneath the Planet of the Apes by Michael Avallone Cover: Bantam, 1970
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1970 Bantam Books)

Big Time, The
The Big Time by Fritz Leiber Cover: Ace Books, 1961 (First Edition) (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1961 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Bloody Sun, The
The Bloody Sun by Marion Zimmer Bradley Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1964 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Black Snow Days
Black Snow Days by Claudia O'Keefe Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Kevin Jankauski (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Bone Dance
Bone Dance by Emma Bull Cover: Ace Books, 1991 (First Edition)
illustration by Jean Targete (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1991 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Believers' World
Believers' World by Robert A.W. Lowndes Cover: Avalon Books, 1961
illustration by Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Thomas Bouregy & Co. - Avalon Books (c)
1961 Avalon Books)

Bug Jack Barron
Bug Jack Barron by Norman Spinrad Cover: Avon Books, 1969 (First Edition)
illustration by Alex Gnideziejko (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University
of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon
Books)

Bring the Jubilee
Bring the Jubilee by Ward Moore Cover: Avon Books, 1972 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1972 Avon Books)

Behold the Man
Behold the Man by Michael Moorcock Cover: Avon Books, 1969 (First US
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon
Books)

Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World, The
The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World by Harlan Ellison
Cover: Avon Books, 1969 (First Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon
(M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1969 Avon Books)

Book of Rack the Healer, The
The Book of Rack the Healer by Zach Hughes Cover: Award, 1972
illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Award Books (c) 1972 Award)

Burster
Burster by Michael Capobianco Cover: Bantam, 1990 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990
Bantam Books)

Bander Snatch
Bander Snatch by Kevin O'Donnell Cover: Bantam, 1979 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979
Bantam Books)

Best SF: 1969
Best SF: 1969 ed. by Harry Harrison Cover: Berkley, 1971 illustration by
Paul Lehr (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 The Berkley Publishing
Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Born of Man and Woman
Born of Man and Woman by Richard Matheson Cover: Chamberlein Press, 1954
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Chamberlain Press (c) 1954 Chamberlain Press)

Birthgrave, The
The Birthgrave by Tanith Lee Cover: DAW Books, 1975 (First Edition)
illustration by George Barr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1975
DAW Books, Inc.)

Baphomet's Meteor
Baphomet's Meteor by Pierre Barbet Cover: DAW Books, 1972 (First US
Edition) illustration by Karel Thole (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1972 DAW Books, Inc.)

Body Snatchers, The
The Body Snatchers by Jack Finney Cover: Dell, 1955 illustration by John
McDermott (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1955 Dell Books)

Birth of the People's Republic of Antarctica, The
The Birth of the People's Republic of Antarctica by John Calvin Batchelor
Cover: Dial Press (First Edition) illustration by Jack Ribik (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1983 Dial Press)

Big Eye, The
The Big Eye by Max Ehrlich Cover: Doubleday, 1949 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1949
Doubleday)

Black Alice
Black Alice by Thom Demijohn Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Virginia Fritz (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1968 Doubleday)

Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction
Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction by Edward L. Ferman Cover:
Doubleday (First Edition) illustration by Peggy & Ronald Barnett (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday
Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971 Doubleday)

Brave Little Toaster, The
The Brave Little Toaster by Thomas M. Disch Cover: Doubleday, 1986 (First
Edition) illustration by Karen Lee Schmidt (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1986 Doubleday)

Beloved Son
Beloved Son by George Turner Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1978
illustration by Dave Griffiths (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Cover: Dave Griffiths. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd.
(c) 1978 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Big X, The
The Big X by Hank Searls Cover: Dell, 1959 illustration by Western
Printing and Lithographing Co. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1959 Dell Books)

Black Cloud, The
The Black Cloud by Fred Hoyle Cover: Heinemann, 1957 illustration by
Desmond Skirrow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1957 William Heinemann, Ltd. )

Black Roads, The
The Black Roads by Joe Hensley Cover: Laser Books, 1976 illustration by
Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Laser Books (c) 1976 Laser Books)

Blake's Progress
Blake's Progress by Ray Nelson Cover: Laser Books, 1975 illustration by
Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Laser Books (c) 1975 Laser Books)

Birthright
Birthright by Kathleen Sky Cover: Laser Books, 1975 illustration by Kelly
Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Laser
Books (c) 1975 Laser Books)

Before Adam
Before Adam by Jack London Cover: Bantam, 1970 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1970
Bantam Books)

Blind Spot, The
The Blind Spot by Austin Hall & Homer Eon Flint Cover: Prime Press, 1951
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Prime Press
(c) 1951 Prime Press)

Butterfly Kid, The
The Butterfly Kid by Chester Anderson Cover: Pyramid Books, 1967
illustration by Gray Morrow (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 Pyramid Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Black Flame, The
The Black Flame by Stanley Weinbaum Cover: Fantasy Press, 1948 (First
Edition) illustration by A.J. Donnell (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Press (c) 1948 Fantasy Press)

Bedbug, The
The Bedbug by Vladimir Mayakovsky Cover: World Publishing Co. (First
Edition) illustration by Elaine Lustig (M. M. Kavanagh. World Publishing
Co. (c) 1960 World Publishing Co.)

Beggars and Choosers
Beggars and Choosers by Nancy Kress Cover: TOR, 1994 (First Edition)
illustration by David Richeid (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1994 Tor Books)

Buddy Holly Is Alive and Well on Ganymede
Buddy Holly Is Alive and Well on Ganymede by Bradley Denton Cover:
William Morrow & Co. (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission
of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1991 William Morrow & Co., Inc.)

Boat of a Million Years, The
The Boat of a Million Years by Poul Anderson Cover: TOR, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by Vincent Di Fate (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1989 Tor Books)

Blood Music
Blood Music by Greg Bear Cover: Ace Books, 1986 illustration by Don
Brautigam (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1986 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Barrayar
Barrayar by Lois McMaster Bujold Cover: Baen Books, 1991 (First Edition)
illustration by Stephen Hickman (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission
of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1991 Baen Books)

Best of Avram Davidson, The
The Best of Avram Davidson by Avram Davidson Cover: Doubleday, 1979
(First Edition) illustration by Roger Zimmerman (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1979 Doubleday)

Burning Chrome
Burning Chrome by William Gibson Cover: Arbor House, 1986 (First US
Edition) illustration by Rich O'Donnell (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by
permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1986 Arbor House)

Best of C.M. Kornbluth, The
The Best of C.M. Kornbluth by Cyril M. Kornbluth Cover: Science Fiction
Book Club, 1978 illustration by Gary Viskupic (M. M. Kavanagh. Jacket:
Gary Viskupic. Reprinted with permission of Doubleday Book and Music
Clubs, Inc. (c) 1978 Doubleday Book & Music Clubs, Inc.)

Brightness Falls from the Air
Brightness Falls from the Air by James Tiptree Cover: Orb, 1993
illustration by Joe Bergeron (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1993 Orb)

Best SF Stories of Brian Aldiss
Best SF Stories of Brian Aldiss by Brian W. Aldiss Cover: Faber and Faber
Ltd., 1972 illustration by Bridget Riley (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover: Bridget
Riley. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1972 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Butler, Octavia Estelle
Octavia Estelle Butler (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Brin, David
David Brin (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Bujold, Lois McMaster
Lois McMaster Bujold (1949- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Bonanno, Margaret Wander
Margaret Wander Bonanno (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Bova, Ben
Ben Bova (1932- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Bradley, Marion Zimmer
Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Brust, Steven
Steven Brust (1955- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Bryant, Edward
Edward Bryant (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Budrys, Algis
Algis Budrys (1931- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Benford, Gregory
Gregory Benford (1941- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Bear, Greg
Greg Bear (1951- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Barnes, John
John Barnes (1957- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Bishop, Michael
Michael Bishop (1945- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Bisson, Terry
Terry Bisson (1942- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Borges, Jorge Luis
Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) ( Bettmann. )

Bradfield, Scott
Scott Bradfield (1955- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Ballard, J.G.
J.G. Ballard (1930- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Banks, Iain M.
Iain M. Banks (1954- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Burroughs, Edgar Rice
Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) ( Bettmann. )

Blish, James
James Blish (1921-1975) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Bester, Alfred
Alfred Bester (1913-1987) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Brackett, Leigh
Leigh Brackett (1915-1978) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Butler, Jack
Jack Butler (1944- ) (Bill Parsons (c) 1995 Bill Parsons)

Bradbury, Ray
Ray Bradbury (1920- ) (Tony Hauser. (c) 1995 Tony Hauser)

Barnes, Steven (On Virtual Reality)
Steven Barnes discusses Virtual Reality: the Pros and Cons. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Barnes, Steven (On Virtual Reality)
Steven Barnes discusses Virtual Reality: the Pros and Cons. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Bear, Greg (About Viruses)
Greg Bear discusses the mysteries and complexities of the virus - and the
challenges viruses will supply for technology of the future. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Bear, Greg (About Viruses)
Greg Bear discusses the mysteries and complexities of the virus - and the
challenges viruses will supply for technology of the future. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Benford, Gregory (The Feel of the Future)
Gregory Benford on creating the "feel of the future" with words. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Benford, Gregory (The Feel of the Future)
Gregory Benford on creating the "feel of the future" with words. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Bishop, Michael (No Enemy But Time)
Michael Bishop and his attempt to dramatize the Origin of Species. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Bishop, Michael (No Enemy But Time)
Michael Bishop and his attempt to dramatize the Origin of Species. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Brin, David (On Survivalists)
David Brin warns those who yearn for the Fall: it's not a Macho thing. (
(c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Brin, David (On Survivalists)
David Brin warns those who yearn for the Fall: it's not a Macho thing. (
(c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Brunner (Why SF?)
John Brunner discusses the influence of War on his imagination. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Brunner (Why SF?)
John Brunner discusses the influence of War on his imagination. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Bujold, Lois McMaster (Falling Free)
Lois McMaster Bujold discusses her novel, Falling Free. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Bujold, Lois McMaster (Falling Free)
Lois McMaster Bujold discusses her novel, Falling Free. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Baxter, Stephen
Stephen Baxter (1957- ) (Sandra Shepard. (c) 1995 Sandra Shepherd)

Beaumont, Charles
Charles Beaumont (1929-1967) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Busby, F.M.
F.M. Busby (1921- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Ballantine, Ian
Ian Ballantine (1916-1995) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Barnes, Steven
Steven Barnes (1952- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Bretnor, Reginald
Reginald Bretnor (1911-1992) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Brunner, John
John Brunner (1934- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Bischoff, David F.
David F. Bischoff (1951- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Barbarella
Roger Vadim's film version of the French comic strip Barbarella (De
Laurentiis-Marianne/Paramount, 1968) was, by modern standards, definitely
not politically correct, but its visual splendor and its self-conscious
1960s sexual daring gives it a sense of freshness and charm. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms
Yet another film about enormous monsters created or roused by atomic
testing, Eugene Lourie's The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (Mutual
Pictures/Warner Brothers, 1953) turned Ray Bradbury's story "The Foghorn"
into a fairly standard monster movie, involving a dinosaur that attacks
New York. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

The Bride of Frankenstein
James Whale's sequel to his 1931 Frankenstein is one of the finest of all
science fiction movies. Many believe that The Bride of Frankenstein
(Universal, 1935) surpasses its predecessor - to say nothing of its
innumerable sequels - in pathos, thrills, and terror. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Buck Rogers
The movie serial of Buck Rogers (Universal, 1939) duplicated the success
of Universal's two Flash Gordon serials, which also starred Larry
("Buster") Crabbe. The design of both series owes something to the cover
paintings of SF pulp magazines. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters.
)

Buck Rogers
The movie serials of the Thirties and Forties appeared in installments
that were only ten to fifteen minutes long, and each episode required at
least one action scene. Movies like Buck Rogers (Universal, 1939) had
quite a frenetic pace. (Courtesy of Crystal Pictures, Inc. (c) Crystal
Pictures, Inc.)

Bilderdijk's A Short Account
Willem BILDERDIJK's A Short Account of a Remarkable Aerial Voyage and
Discovery of a New Planet is the story of a balloonist's inadvertent
voyage to a small satellite. It is perhaps the key transitional work
between earlier FANTASTIC VOYAGES and later SF.

Bellamy's Looking Backward
Edward BELLAMY's Looking Backward, 2000-1887, is a tour of the UTOPIAN
society of the future. Although it is almost devoid of drama, it was one
of the most famous novels of the future during the nineteenth century.

Burroughs's Tarzan
Serialized in 1912, then published in book form in 1914, Edgar Rice
BURROUGHS'sTARZAN OF THE APES has been enormously influential in both SF
and fantasy literature, although it is not strictly Science Fiction.

Burroughs's A Princess of Mars
Second in popularity only to Tarzan, Edgar Rice BURROUGHS's 1912 serial,
A PRINCESS OF MARS (published in book form five years later),
singlehandedly created the fictional romance of MARS.

Buck Rogers comic born
Based on the magazine serial, Armageddon 2419 AD," BUCK ROGERS in the
Twenty-Fifth Century" first appeared as an American comic strip in 1929,
where it continued for nearly forty years. A movie serial, a TV series,
and a feature film eventually followed.

Bantam Books founded
Ian BALLANTINE, who had earlier imported Penguin Books into the US during
World War II, believed in paperbacks. He founded BANTAM Books as a source
of inexpensive reprints.

Brown's What Mad Universe
Fredric BROWN's novel, WHAT MAD UNIVERSE, is one of the very first comic
SF novels, and still one of the best. He is best known for his mystery
novels and very short SF stories.See Also: ALTERNATE WORLDS.

Bradbury 's Martian Chronicles
Ray BRADBURY's cycle of stories in THE MARTIAN CHRONICLESdeal more with
the MARS of the early pulp magazines than the Mars known to astronomers by
1950. The stories still generate a powerful sense of romantic nostalgia.

Blish's Okie
James BLISH's stories of the flying cities - called the Okie stories in
magazines, and CITIES IN FLIGHT upon book publication - combined pulp
style with rigor and intelligence.

Ballantine Books founded
Ian Ballantine had earlier founded Bantam Books, but wanted to create a
paperback company that emphasized originals rather than reprints.
BALLANTINE Books was the result.

Blish's Surface Tension
James BLISH's sequel to his early and little-known "Sunken Universe"
remains a classic of science fiction. In it, microscopic humans pilot an
inch-long spaceship between two puddles.

Bradbury's A Sound of Thunder
Ray BRADBURY's slick and expert TIME TRAVEL story was published in both
Collier's and Playboy before being reprinted by an SF magazine, and so it
reached a very wide audience.

Beginning of Scientology
L. Ron HUBBARD breaks with DIANETIC Foundation, and founds the Church of
SCIENTOLOGY. Incorporated in 1955, the Church of Scientology soon had
adherents all over the world.

Blish's attack on McCarthy
James BLISH's 1954 story, "At Death's End", contained a portrait of a
demagogic politician clearly based on Senator Joseph McCarthy; the 1956
novel version, They Shall Have Stars, intensified Blish's attack.See Also:
HISTORY.

Blish 's A Case of Conscience
Based on his 1953 novella, James BLISH's theological SF novel, A CASE OF
CONSCIENCE, was one of the most sophisticated and moving SF novels of the
fifties, and won the HUGO Award.

Budrys's Rogue Moon
The culminating novel of Algis BUDRYS's first period, an allusive and
sophisticated novel that many readers regard as a classic.

Ballard's The Voices of Time
The first of J.G. BALLARD's stories to dramatize the themes of ENTROPY,
natural DISASTER, and surrender to strangeness that will preoccupy him for
the rest of the decade.

Burgess's A Clockwork Orange
Anthony BURGESS's dark SF novel, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, was best-known for
the radical argot of its narrator; it was the 1971 Stanley Kubrick film
that gained notoriety for its violence.See Also: A CLOCKWORK ORANGE.

Ballard's condensed novels
The first of J.G. Ballard's condensed novels, You and Me and the
Continuum, baffled and irritated conservative readers. It eventually
appeared as part of The Atrocity Exhibition.

Brunner's Stand on Zanzibar
John BRUNNER's ambitious novel of the overpopulated 21st century adopted
a range of stylistic techniques from John Dos Passos, but STAND ON
ZANZIBAR achieved its own vision and voice.See Also: DYSTOPIAS.

Benford's Timescape
TIMESCAPE, Gregory BENFORD's novel of tachyon research, near-future
ecological catastrophe, and alternate time streams is perhaps the most
credible time travel novel ever published.See Also: SCIENTISTS.

Blade Runner opens
The Ridley SCOTT film," BLADE RUNNER", opens and William GIBSON publishes
"Burning Chrome", two important works in the developing CYBERPUNK
sensibility.See Also: CINEMA.

Bear's Blood Music
An early story of nanometer-scale engineering, Greg BEAR's BLOOD MUSIC
presages science fiction's great interest in NANOTECHNOLOGY.See Also:
GENETIC ENGINEERING.

Brin's Startide Rising
David BRIN's second novel, STARTIDE RISING, wins both the NEBULA and HUGO
Awards, and his Uplift series becomes enormously popular.

Bantam launches Spectra
BANTAM's science fiction line, revived in 1983, is christened Bantam
Spectra and launched with hoopla. It will be one of the most influential
SF book publishers of the decade.

Bisson's Bears Discover Fire
Hailed as one of the finest SF short stories in many years, "Bears
Discover Fire" won the NEBULA and HUGO Awards, and became the title story
to Terry BISSON's first collection.

Birth of the Paperback
Although American science fiction had been almost entirely a magazine
genre in its first twenty years, the development of the paperback after
World War II provided an enormous new market for the field. BALLANTINE
BOOKS, founded in 1952, specialized in science fiction; and ACE BOOKS,
founded a year later, published SF almost exclusively. The creation of
small presses to reprint science fiction serials in the late forties, and
the formation of the SCIENCE FICTION BOOK CLUB in the early fifties,
confirmed SF’s trend away from the magazines and into book form.

Childhood's End
CLARKE, ARTHUR C(HARLES)(Ballantine, 1953)Earth, on the verge of nuclear
Mutual Assured Destruction, is saved by the intervention of benevolent
aliens who have the form of traditional devils. A calm interregnum
prepares the way for the last generation of children, who are telepaths.
The adults left behind watch helplessly as the children, outgrowing them
as no young generation ever has before, rise up and merge with the
spiritual powers of the cosmos. The influence of Olaf Stapledon, who was
as formative for Clarke's generation of SF writers, at least in the United
Kingdom, as H. G. Wells, is patent. The pedestrian, at times downright
static, pace of the novel has apparently not interfered with its immense
popularity. Perhaps it has been received not as a story but rather as a
scripture: Fallible humanity can't make it without transcendent help. If
so, that says a lot about the audience for early nuclear age SF, which
would have upset that era's for the most part quite hard-headed writers.
See also CHILDREN IN SF and ESCHATOLOGY

City
SIMAK, CLIFFORD D(ONALD)(Gnome, 1952)Eight quietly told stories from
Astounding, 1944 to 1951, which describe the decline and disappearance of
humanity once it abandons its most characteristic habitat, the city. Some
of the more venturesome leave civilization to imprint their psyches on
wild, non-tool-using animals native to Jupiter ("Desertion"); others
retreat to automated estates, as in "Huddling Place," a locale that recurs
in later stories, run by an ageless robot butler named Jenkins and
inhabited by sentient, peaceable dogs who are taking over humans'
erstwhile role of planetary custodians. (Meanwhile the ants, also evolved
into sentience, pursue bizarre and incomprehensible goals of their own.)
In book form, the stories are framed as "legends," told around campfires
by the dogs, who politely debate whether humans in fact ever existed. A
haunting, elegiac tale, diametrically opposed to the "can do" spirit of
most Golden Age SF. An additional story, "Epilog," was added for a later
edition (Ace, 1981). A major work, which in 1953 won the International
Fantasy Award. See also PASTORAL

Camp Concentration
DISCH, THOMAS M(ICHAEL)(Hart-Davis, 1968) A political prisoner is a
guinea pig in an experiment that uses a syphilis-related spirochete to
boost IQ to unparalleled levels. The author boldly presents the story as
first-person narrative and carries it off brilliantly. A key work of
avant-garde SF, written with its serialization in New Worlds in mind.
Compare Daniel Keyes's FLOWERS FOR ALGERNON. See also INTELLIGENCE

Cosmicomics
CALVINO, ITALO(Harcourt, 1968)Trans. by William Weaver of Le Cosmicomiche
(1965).The childlike Qfwfq has the entire cosmos and all eternity as his
playground, and naively confronts the great mysteries of time and space in
12 bizarre tales. t zero (1969) offers more of the same. Zestful modern
fabliaux with a unique charm. Weaver won the National Book Award for
translation for Cosmicomics. See also FABULATION

Cold Allies
Anthony, Patricia (Harcourt, 1993)Fine first novel. The world is in sorry
shape because of the climatic changes of the greenhouse effect. Famine is
widespread, and just about every nation is at war with another, struggling
over the planet's dwindling resources. Then enigmatic ALIENS appear; they
are seen only as cold blue lights, floating over the battlefields,
occasionally kidnapping people. Anthony is a fine prose stylist with a
knack tor creating believable characters in a small space, evident also in
her second novel Brother Termite (Harcourt, 1993). Compare John Kessel's
Good News from Outer Space and Joan Slonczewski's The Wall Around Eden.

A Clockwork Orange
BURGESS, ANTHONY (pseud. of John Anthony Burgess Wilson)(Heinemann,
1962)In highly inventive future slang based on Russian loan-words, the
story's hero tells how casual recreational gang violence, including
murder, got him into prison and then into super-Pavlovian therapy; after
treatment, even the thought of violence makes him sick. But so, as side
effects, do sex and his former love for classical music; the point
apparently being that it is better to do bad things as a free person than
not to do them as the result of conditioning. Recognized
by"mainstream"critics who probably wouldn't call it SF, and filmed
effectively by Stanley Kubrick, this is a world as bleak and vicious as
Nineteen Eighty-Four-and disturbingly closer, now, than Orwell's to our
own. However, Kubrick's version was based on the first U.S. edition of the
book, which omitted the crucial last chapter, in which (as Burgess pointed
out in a new introduction, 1987)" my young thuggish protagonist grows up .
. . and recognises that human energy is better expended on creation than
destruction," which radically changes the meaning of A Clockwork Orange
from the way it had been received in America. Compare Damon Knight, Hell's
Pavement ; contrast B. F. Skinner, Walden Two . See also DYSTOPIAS

Courtship Rite
KINGSBURY, DONALD(Timescape, 1982) U.K. title: Geta, 1984A colony on an
arid world is in cultural extremis because of its lack of resources, and
the central characters become involved with a challenge to its established
order. An unusually detailed and complex novel, interesting because of its
carefully worked political and ANTHROPOLOGICAL themes. Compare Frank
Herbert's DUNE.

China Mountain Zhang
MCHUGH, MAUREEN F.(Tor, 1992)The title character of McHugh's first novel
is a Chinese American living in a United States that has fallen to
third-world status just as China has risen, through apparently peaceful
means, to dominate the world. In this hierarchical culture, Zhang's
ancestry automatically places him above most Caucasians in status (though
below native-born Chinese). Zhang, however, has a couple of dirty secrets.
First, he's only half-Chinese, though his parents had him genetically
adjusted to hide his Hispanic ancestry. Second, he's gay, and both China
and Chinese-dominated America are puritanical societies. As the story
progresses, we follow Zhang's rise from construction worker to successful
architect. The novel's two greatest strengths lie in its depiction of a
believable and sympathetic gay character and in its equally believable
portrayal of a Chinese-dominated 21st century. Besides receiving
nominations for the Hugo and Nebula, China Mountain Zhang won both the
Tiptree Award and the Locus Award for best first novel. Compare David
Wingrove's Chung Kuo. See also SEX

Chronopolis and Other Stories
BALLARD, J(AMES) G(RAHAM)(Putnam, 1971)Ballard's short fiction is
distributed over more than a dozen collections, in various combinations,
but this selection-which overlaps considerably withThe Best Short Stories
of J. G. Ballard (1978)-preserves the best of his early work. Alienated
protagonists bear witness to the world's descent into a perverse
decadence; if they attempt to resist (many do not), they are likely to be
maddened by the consciousness of their hopeless entrapment. "The Terminal
Beach" (1964) marked a turning point in the concerns of British SF, and
signaled the start of the era of avant-garde methods. See also OPTIMISM
AND PESSIMISM

The Crystal World
BALLARD, J(AMES) G(RAHAM)(Cape, 1966)Completes a quartet of apocalyptic
novels begun with The Wind From Nowhere (1962) and continued with The
Drowned World and The Drought. Time begins to "crystallize out," causing
vast tracts of African rain forest to undergo a metamorphosis that echoes
and contrasts with the metamorphosis of human flesh that is leprosy. The
hero's symbolic odyssey, like that of the protagonist in Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness, brings him to a more fundamental existential level.
Superb imagery. See also END OF THE WORLD

Cities in Flight
BLISH, JAMES (Avon, 1970)U.K. title: A Clash of CymbalsThis is a
tetralogy, of which the stories comprising Earthman, Come Home (Putnam,
1955) were written first. John Amalfi is mayor of a future New York, which
flies through interstellar space trading work for supplies; it, and other
such itinerant cities, are" Okies." Two "prequels,"They Shall Have Stars
(Faber, 1956) and A Life For The Stars(Putnam, 1962) describe respectively
the development of the cities' means of propulsion (under cover of a
boondoggle construction job on a vividly but archaically described
Jupiter) and the subsequent flight of the cities from Earth's dreary
totalitarian government. Finally in The Triumph of Time (Avon, 1958; U.K.
title A Clash of Cymbals), Amalfi's can-do New Yorkers are faced with the
ultimate challenge of the collapse of the universe, and contrive to solve
even that. An essay at the end of the four volumes by Richard Mullen,
originally published in Riverside Quarterly, parallels the
youth-maturity-senescence cycle Oswald Spengler charted for the
comparative history of civilizations in The Decline of the West with a
similar cycle for Blish's "Earthmanist" civilization. A major, if
ponderous, work. See also SPACE OPERA

Cyteen
CHERRYH, C. J. (pseud. of Carolyn Janice Cherry)(Warner, 1988)The rulers
of the planet Cyteen have a monopoly on the creation of Azi, the
artificial human beings who have featured so prominently in such earlier
Cherryh novels as Downbelow Station and the underrated Forty Thousand in
Gehena (1983), and they also have the rarely used ability to CLONE human
beings. When the aging Ariane Emory, ruthless director of the planet's
genetic labs and a major political figure, decides to have herself cloned,
the resulting child becomes a pawn in a complex series of political
manipulations. This powerful psychological study is Cherryh's longest
novel and her most difficult, but there's plenty of meat here to reward
the diligent reader. For a very different novel that nonetheless asks
similar questions about genetic determinism, compare Ira Levin's The Boys
From Brazil. Hugo winner, 1989

Citizen of the Galaxy
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Scribner, 1957) Although marketed as a juvenile
novel, this work was serialized for adults in Astounding. The Horatio
Alger hero is in an interstellar setting, except that this lad starts out
closer to the edge than Horatio's bootblacks and newsboys: he is a slave
on a far planet of a despotic empire. He escapes into space with a nomadic
trading company and eventually gets back to Earth, where he assumes (by
inheritance!) the headship of a giant financial corporation. This is a
bildungsroman, except that the young hero never really grows up; but
Heinlein's knack for creating sociologically plausible cultures is well
displayed. Alex Panshin in Heinlein in Dimension, argued that Citizen of
the Galaxy, with a plot revealed at the end to be essentially circular, is
normative for all of Heinlein's longer work. See also CHILDREN'S SF

Crystal Express
STERLING, BRUCE(Arkham, 1989)Early short fiction by one of the cofounders
of the CYBERPUNK movement. Included is Sterling's entire Shaper/Mechanist
series, most importantly "Swarm," as well as such excellent stories as
"The Flowers of Edo," "Dinner in Audoghast," "Green Days in Brunei," and
"Twenty Evocations." A number of these are award nominees and all are
worth reading. A more recent, equally good collection of Sterling's short
fiction is Globalhead (1992). Compare William Gibson's BURNING CHROMEand
Pat Cadigan's Patterns.

Cinefantastique
Cinefantastique, Feb. 1994 Published by Frederick S. Clarke Cover
illustration by John Hanley (M.M. Kavanagh. Frederick S. Clarke. (c) 1994
Frederick S. Clarke.)

Comet
Comet, July 1941 Published by H-K Publications, Inc. Cover illustration
by Leo Morey (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. H-K Publications, Inc. (c) 1941 H-K Publications, Inc.)

Cosmos Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine
Cosmos Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine, July 1977 Published by
Baronet Publishing Co. Cover illustration by Vincent Di Fate (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Baronet Publishing
Co. (c) 1977 Baronet Publishing Co.)

Crank!
Crank!, Winter 1993 Published by Broken Mirrors Press Cover illustration
by Ian Miller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Broken Mirrors Press. (c) 1993 Broken Mirrors Press.)

Critical Wave
Critical Wave, July 1988 Published by Martin Tudor and Steve Green (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Martin Tudor and
Steve Green. (c) 1988 Martin Tudor and Steve Green.)

Conditioned for Space
Conditioned for Space by Alan Ash Cover: Ward, Lock & Co., 1955 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Ward, Lock & Co.
Limited (c) 1955 Ward, Lock & Co., Ltd.)

Conquest of Earth
Conquest of Earth by Manly Banister Cover: Airmont Publishing, 1957
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Airmont Publishing Co., Inc. - Airmont Books (c) 1957 Airmont Publishing
Company )

Chains (Vol. 1)
Chains (Vol. 1) by Henri Barbusse Cover: International Publishers, 1925
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
International Publishers (c) 1925 International Publishers)
================================================ Ashes, Ashes
Child of the Dawn, The
The Child of the Dawn by A.C. Benson Cover: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1912
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Children of the Night
Children of the Night by John Blackburn Cover: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1970
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1970 Johnathan Cape)

Centaur, The
The Centaur by Algernon Blackwood Cover: Macmillan and Co., Ltd., 1911
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Macmillan
and Co., Ltd. London (c) 1911 Macmillan and Co. Ltd.)

Children of Anthi
Children of Anthi by Jay D. Blakeney Cover: Ace Books, 1985 illustration
by Griesbach & Martucci (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.
, Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1985 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Crime of Under Seas, A
A Crime of Under Seas by Guy Boothby Cover: Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd., 1905
illustration by Stanley L. Wood (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. )

Centuries Apart
Centuries Apart by Edward Bouve Cover: Little, Brown & Co., 1894 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Published by Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c) 1894 Little, Brown and
Company (Inc.))

City of Masques
City of Masques by Alan Brennert Cover: Playboy Press Paperbacks, 1978
illustration by Dennis Luzak (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1978 Playboy Press. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Cassiopeia Affair, The
The Cassiopeia Affair by Harrison Brown & Chloe Zerwick Cover: Doubleday,
1968 illustration by Lawrence Ratzkin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1968 Doubleday)

Chivalry
Chivalry by James Branch Cabell Cover: HarperCollins/Harber & Bros., 1909
(First Edition) illustration by Howard Pyle (M. M. Kavanagh. )

Colonists of Space
Colonists of Space by Charles Carr Cover: Ward, Lock & Co., 1954 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Wand, Lock & Co.,
Ltd. (c) 1954 Ward, Lock & Co., Ltd.)

Coma
Coma by Robin Cook Cover: Little, Brown & Co., 1977 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Published
by Little, Brown and Company (Inc.) (c) 1977 Little, Brown and Company
(Inc.))

Cette Cher Humanite
Cette Cher Humanite by Philippe Curval Cover: Editions Robert Laffont,
1976 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Editions Robert Laffont (c) 1976 Editions Robert Laffont)

Christmas Carol, A
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens Cover: Yale University Press (The
Pierpont Morgan Library), 1993 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Yale University Press (c) 1993 Yale Univ. Press (The
Pierpont Morgan Library) )

Caesar's Column
Caesar's Column by Edmund Boisgilbert, M.D. (Ignatius Donnelly) Cover:
Arena Publishing Co., 1894 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Complex Man
Complex Man by Marie Farca Cover: Doubleday, 1973 illustration by Anita
Siegal & Jonathan Field (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.
, Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1973 Doubleday)

Cold Cash Warrior
Cold Cash Warrior by Bill Fawcett & Robert Asprin Cover: Ace Books, 1989
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1989 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Circus of Dr. Lao, The
The Circus of Dr. Lao by Charles Finney Cover: Bantam, 1964 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1964 Bantam Books)

City of Endless Night
City of Endless Night by Milo Hastings Cover: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1920
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1920 Dodd, Mead)

Crisis! - 1992
Crisis! - 1992 by Benson Herbert Cover: Richards, 1936 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1936 Richards)

Contagion to This World
Contagion to This World by Fedor Kaul Cover: Geoffrey Bles, 1933 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
(c) 1933 Geoffrey Bles)

Copper Crown, The
The Copper Crown by Patricia Kennealy Cover: Bluejay, 1984 illustration
by Michael Embden (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Book jackets reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books Inc. All
rights reserved. (c) 1984 Bluejay Books Inc.)

Creator
Creator by Jeremy Leven Cover: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan Inc., 1980
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1980
Coward, McCann & Geoghegan Inc.)

Carder's Paradise
Carder's Paradise by Malcolm Levene Cover: Walker & Co., 1969
illustration by Lena Fong Luen (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of Walker and Company. (c)
1969 Walker & Company)

Childermass, The
The Childermass by Wyndham Lewis Cover: Chatto & Windus, 1928 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
House UK Limited. (c) 1928 Chatto & Windous)

Coming Race, The
The Coming Race by First Baron Lytton Cover: Donohue-Hennberry & Co.,
1890 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Donohue-Henneberry & Co. )

City of Gold, The
The City of Gold by Edward Markwick Cover: W. Thacker & Co., 1898 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. W.
Thacker & Co. UK )

Chance
Chance by Ann Maxwell Cover: Popular Library, 1975 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Warner
Books, Inc. (c) 1975 Popular Library, Inc.)

Crisis in 2140
Crisis in 2140 by John J. McGuire & H. Beam Piper Cover: Ace Books, 1957
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1957 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Caleb Catlum's America
Caleb Catlum's America by Vincent McHugh Cover: Stackpole Sons, 1936
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1936 Stackpole Sons)

Club Tycoon Sends Man to Moon
Club Tycoon Sends Man to Moon by Felix Mendelsohn Cover: Book Co. of
America, 1965 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1965 Book Co. of America)

Created, the Destroyer
Created, the Destroyer by Warren Murphy & Richard Sapir Cover: Pinnacle
Books, 1976 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Pinnacle Books (c) 1976 Pinnacle Books)

Cloud Chamber
Cloud Chamber by Howard L. Myers Cover: Popular Library, 1977 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1977 Popular Library, Inc.)

Cityless and Countryless World, A
A Cityless and Countryless World by Henry Olerich Cover: Gilmore &
Olerich, 1893 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. )

Creation's Doom
Creation's Doom by Desiderius Papp Cover: D. Appleton-Century Co. Inc.,
1934 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. D.
Appleton-Century Company (c) 1934 D. Appleton-Century Company Inc.)

Centenarians, The
The Centenarians by Gilbert Phelps Cover: Heineman, 1958 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1958
William Heinemann, Ltd. )

Central Passage
Central Passage by Lawrence Schoonover Cover: Dell, 1962 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1962
Dell Books)

Crossroads to Nowhere
Crossroads to Nowhere by Raymond Stark Cover: Ward, Lock & Co. Ltd., 1956
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Ward, Lock & Co. Limited (c) 1956 Ward, Lock & Co., Ltd.)

Concrete
Concrete by Aelfrida Tillyard Cover: Hutchinson & Co., 1930 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
Century House UK Limited. (c) 1930 Hutchinson & Co.)

Crash Landing on Iduna
Crash Landing on Iduna by Arthur R. Tofte Cover: Laser Books, 1975
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Laser Books (c) 1975 Laser Books)

Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, A
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain Cover:
HarperCollins/Harper & Bros., 1899 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Cure for Death
Cure for Death by Victor Valentine Cover: Foursquare Books, 1960 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Foursquare Books
(c) 1960 Foursquare Books)

Crew of the Mekong, The
The Crew of the Mekong by Evgeny Voiskunsky & Isa Borisovich Lukodianov
Cover: Mir Publishers, 1974 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Mir Publishers (c) 1974 Mir Publishers)

Chariots of the Gods?
Chariots of the Gods? by Erich Von Daniken Cover: Bantam, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1970 Bantam Books)

Chariot into Time
Chariot into Time by Karl Zeigfreid (Tom W. Wade) Cover: John Spencer &
Co., 1953 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
John Spencer & Co. (c) 1953 John Spencer & Co. UK)

Children of the Sphinx
Children of the Sphinx by George C. Wallis Cover: Cosmopolitan Printing
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Cosmopolitan
Printing (c) 1925 Cosmopolitan Printing)

Children of the Light
Children of the Light by Susan Weston Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1987
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
St. Martin's Press. (c) 1987 St. Martin's Press)

Chung Kuo: The Middle Kingdom
Chung Kuo: The Middle Kingdom by David Wingrove Cover: Delacorte Press,
1990 (First Edition) illustration by Jean Tuttle (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Delecorte
Press, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990
Delecorte Press.)

Chaos in Arcturus
Chaos in Arcturus by Karl Zeigfreid Cover: John Spencer & Co., 1953
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. John
Spencer & Co. (c) 1953 John Spencer & Co.)

Cold Cash War, The
The Cold Cash War by Robert Lynn Asprin Cover: Dell, 1977 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1977 Dell Books)

Cowboy Feng's Space Bar and Grille
Cowboy Feng's Space Bar and Grille by Steven Brust Cover: Ace Books, 1990
illustration by James Gurney (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1990 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Crisis on Cheiron
Crisis on Cheiron by Juanita Coulson Cover: Ace Books, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1967 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Cradle of the Sun
Cradle of the Sun by Brian Stableford Cover: Ace Books, 1969 illustration
by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Crack in Space, The
The Crack in Space by Philip K. Dick Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1966 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Castle Perilous
Castle Perilous by John DeChancie Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by James Gurney (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1988 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Cry Republic
Cry Republic by Kirk Mitchell Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by James Gurney (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1989 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Cybernetic Shogun, The
The Cybernetic Shogun by Victor Milan Cover: William Morrow & Co., 1990
(First Edition) illustration by Don Bolognes (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of William
Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1990 William Morrow & Co., Inc.)

Crystal Empire, The
The Crystal Empire by L. Neil Smith Cover: TOR, 1986 illustration by
Michael Whelan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1986 Tor Books)

Clone, The
The Clone by Theodore L. Thomas Cover: Berkley (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1965 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

City of Glass
City of Glass by Noel Loomis Cover: Columbia, 1942 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc. (c)
1942 Columbia Publications, Inc.)

Caliban Landing
Caliban Landing by Steven Popkes Cover: Congdon & Weed (First Edition)
illustration by Bob Walters (M. M. Kavanagh. Congdon & Weed (c) 1987
Congdon and Weed)

Cage a Man
Cage a Man by F.M. Busby Cover: Science Fiction Book Club, 1973
illustration by Gary Viskupic (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Jacket: Gary Viskupic. Reprinted with permission of
Doubleday Book and Music Clubs, Inc. (c) 1973 Doubleday Book & Music
Clubs, Inc. )

Charles Fort Never Mentioned Wombats
Charles Fort Never Mentioned Wombats by Gene DeWeese & Robert Coulson
Cover: Doubleday, 1977 (First Edition) illustration by Peter Rauch (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1977 Doubleday)

Conscience Place
Conscience Place by Joyce Thompson Cover: Doubleday (First Edition)
illustration by Fred Marcellino (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1984 Doubleday)

Copy Shop, The
The Copy Shop by Evelyn E. Smith Cover: Doubleday, 1985 (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1985 Doubleday)

Capella's Golden Eyes
Capella's Golden Eyes by Christopher Evans Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd.,
1980 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1980 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Children of the Atom
Children of the Atom by Wilmar Shiras Cover: Gnome Press, 1933
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Gnome Press (c) 1933 Gnome)

City
City by Clifford Simak Cover: Ace Books, 1973 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1973 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Code Three
Code Three by Rick Raphael Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1967 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1967 Victor
Gollancz Ltd.)

Course of the Heart, The
The Course of the Heart by M. John Harrison Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd.,
1992 (First Edition) illustration by Dave McKean (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1992 Victor
Gollancz Ltd.)

Creed for the Third Millennium, A
A Creed for the Third Millennium by Colleen McCullough Cover: Avon Books,
1985 (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown
by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1985 Avon Books)

Colossus
Colossus by D.F. Jones Cover: Berkley, 1966 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1966 The Berkley
Publishing Group . Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Camp Concentration
Camp Concentration by Thomas M. Disch Cover: Hart Davis, 1968 (First
Edition) illustration by Ken Reilly (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1968 Hart Davis)

Chain Reaction
Chain Reaction by Chris Hodder-Williams Cover: Doubleday, 1959 (First US
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1959 Doubleday & Co.)

Crying of Lot 49, The
The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon Cover: J.B. Lippincott, 1966
(First Edition) illustration by Milton Charles (M. M. Kavanagh. JB
Lippincott Co. (c) 1966 JB Lippincott Co.)

Cold War in a Country Garden
Cold War in a Country Garden by Lindsay Gutteridge Cover: Jonathan Cape,
1971 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Random Century House UK Limited. (c) 1971 Johnathan
Cape)

Child Buyer, The
The Child Buyer by John Hersey Cover: Bantam, 1961 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1961
Bantam Books)

Colour out of Space, The
The Colour out of Space by H.P. Lovecraft Cover: Lancer Books, 1969
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lancer
Books (c) 1969 Lancer)

Carmen Dog
Carmen Dog by Carol Emshwiller Cover: Mercury House, 1988 (First Edition)
illustration by Renee Flower (M. M. Kavanagh. Published by Mercury House,
San Francisco, CA. (c) 1988 Mercury House)

Case of the Little Green Men, The
The Case of the Little Green Men by Mack Reynolds Cover: Phoenix Press,
1951 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Phoenix Press (c) 1951 Phoenix Press)

Collected Feghoot, The
The Collected Feghoot by Briarton Grendel Cover: Pulphouse Publishing
(First Edition) illustration by Tim Kirk (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of
Pulphouse Publishing. (c) 1992 Pulphouse Publishing, Inc.)

Coming Self-Destruction of the United States, The
The Coming Self-Destruction of the United States by Alan Seymour Cover:
Panther Books, 1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited.
(c) 1971 Panther Books)

Cortez on Jupiter
Cortez on Jupiter by Ernest Hogan Cover: TOR, 1990 illustration by Ron
Walotsky (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1990 Tor Books)

China Mountain Zhang
China Mountain Zhang by Maureen F. McHugh Cover: TOR, 1992 (First
Edition) illustration by Wayne Barlowe (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books)

Complete Stories (Vol. I), The
The Complete Stories (Vol. I) by Isaac Asimov Cover: Doubleday, 1990
(First Edition) illustration by Barclay Shaw (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Doubleday)

Chronopolis
Chronopolis by J.G. Ballard Cover: Berkley, 1972 illustration by Richard
Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1972 The Berkley Publishing
Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Crystal World, The
The Crystal World by J.G. Ballard Cover: Berkley, 1967 illustration by
Richard Powers (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1967 The Berkley Publishing
Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Cities in Flight
Cities in Flight by James Blish Cover: Avon Books, 1970 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1970 Avon Books)

Cyteen
Cyteen by C.J. Cherryh Cover: Warner Books, 1988 (First Edition)
illustration by Don Maitz (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1988 Warner Books, Inc.)

Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick, The
The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick by Philip K. Dick Cover: Citadel
Twilight, 1991 illustration by Kevn Kelly (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of
Carol Publishing Group. (c) 1991 Carol Publishing)

Cornelius Chronicles, The
The Cornelius Chronicles by Michael Moorcock Cover: Avon Books, 1977
(First Edition) illustration by Fernandes (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1977 Avon Books)

Child Garden, The
The Child Garden by Geoff Ryman Cover: Unwin Hyman, 1989 (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers
Limited. (c) 1989 Unwin Hyman)

Crystal Express
Crystal Express by Bruce Sterling Cover: Arkham House, 1989 (First
Edition) illustration by Rick Lieder (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of Arkham
House Publishers. (c) 1989 by Arkham House Publishers, Inc.)

Claremont ,Chris
Chris Claremont (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Clayton, Patricia Jo
Patricia Jo Clayton (1939- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Chalker, Jack
Jack L. Chalker (1944- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Charnas, Suzy McKee
Suzy McKee Charnas (1939- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Crispin, A.C.
A.C. Crispin (1950- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Clement, Hal
Hal Clement (1922- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Cherryh, C.J.
C.J. Cherryh (1942- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Cadigan, Pat
Pat Cadigan (1953- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Cabell, James Branch
James Branch Cabell (1879-1958) ( Bettmann. )

Carroll, Lewis
Lewis Carroll (Charles Dodgson, 1832-1898) ( Bettmann. )

Carter, Angela
Angela Carter (1940-1992) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Clute, John F.
John F. Clute (1940- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Crowley, John
John Crowley (1942- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Clarke, Arthur C.
Arthur C. Clarke (1917- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Campbell, John W. Jr.
John W. Campbell, Jr. (1910-1971) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Carr, Terry
Terry Carr (1937-1987) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Crichton, Michael
Michael Crichton (1942- ) (Joyce Ravid (c) 1995 Joyce Ravid)

Coville, Bruce
Bruce Coville (1950- ) (Jules. (c) 1995 Jules)

Charnas, Suzie McKee (No Truce)
In Suzie McKee Charnas's work, Space belongs to everyone. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Charnas, Suzie McKee (No Truce)
In Suzie McKee Charnas's work, Space belongs to everyone. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Clute, John (Adolescent Sensibility)
John Clute on the adolescent sensibility of SF readers. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Clute, John (Adolescent Sensibility)
John Clute on the adolescent sensibility of SF readers. ( (c) Grolier
Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Clarke, Arthur C. (On Following *2001)
Arthur C. Clarke describes the difficulties of creating a being with
superhuman intelligence. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Clarke, Arthur C. (On Following *2001)
Arthur C. Clarke describes the difficulties of creating a being with
superhuman intelligence. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Cities & Space
SF writers use the concept of Space in a variety of ways, from a good
place to hang out in the future to a metaphor for the unexplored in the
human psyche. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Calvino, Italo
Italo Calvino (1923-1985) (Denis Gibier. (c) 1995 Denis Gibier)

Carver, Jeffrey
Jeffrey Carver (1949- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Chandler, A. Bertram
A. Bertram Chandler (1912-1984) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Cogswell, Theodore R.
Theodore R. Cogswell (1918-1987) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Coney, Michael G.
Michael G. Coney (1932- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

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Contributors
From The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, John Clute and Peter Nicholls,
eds.Each contributor to this encyclopedia may be identified by his or her
initials, as tabulated against his or her full name below. Rather more
than half the contributors themselves receive entries in this book, and
are listed below with their surnames capitalized. Data on other
contributors appear below the list. Names asterisked once (*) are
responsible only for material retained from the first edition; names
asterisked twice (**) appear newly in this second edition. The remainder
have worked on both editions.** Ivan Adamovic IA* Mark Adlard MA** Tim
Adye TA* Brian W. Aldiss BWA** Hans Joachim Alpers HJA** Mike Ashley MA**
Miquel Barcelo MB** Zoran Bekric ZB** Matt Bishop MB** Russell Blackford
RuB** Everett F. Bleiler EFB** Richard Bleiler RB** Scott Bradfield SB**
Damien Broderick DB* John Brosnan JB** Stanislav Cermak SC** Jacques
Chambon JCh** I.F. Clarke IFCJohn Clute JC** John Robert Colombo JRC**
Adrian Cox AC** Niels Dalgaard ND** J.A. Dautzenberg JAD** Hugh Davies HD*
Thomas M. Disch TMD** Jane Donawerth JD* Malcolm J. Edwards MJEJohn
Eggeling JE** Gregory Feeley GF** Brian Forte BF* H. Bruce Franklin HBF**
Robert Frazier RF** Neil Gaiman NG** Vladimir Gakov VG** Bruce Gillispie
BG** John Grandidge JoG** John Grant (Paul Barnett ) JGr** Colin Greenland
CGJon Gustafson JG** Rob Hansen RH* Jim Harmon JH** Penny Heal PH**
Stephen Holland SH** John-Henri Holmberg J-HH** Jyrki Ijas JI* Maxim
Jakubowski MJ** Colin A. Johnson CJ** Jorg Kastner JK** Roz Kaveney RK
David Ketterer DK** Robert K.J. Killheffer RKJK** Michael Klossner MK**
David Langford DRL** Peter Kuczka PK** Sam J. Lundwall SJL* Robert Louit
RL** Murray MacLachlan MM* David I. Masson DIM** Charles Shaar Murray CSM*
Alan Myers AM** Kim Newman KNPeter Nicholls PN** Phil Nichols PhN**
Patrick Nielsen Hayden PNH** Jaroslav Olsa jr JO** Carlo Pagetti CP* Frank
H. Parnell FHP** Ellen Pedersen EP* A.B. Perkins ABP** Luc Pomerleau LP**
Alexander Popov APDavid Pringle DP** Phil Raines PhR** Jenny Randles JR**
Robert Reginald RoR* Peter Roberts PR** Roger Robinson RR** Cornel Robu
CRFranz Rottensteiner FR ** Marcus Rowland MR* John Scarborough JSc**
Mauricio-Jose Schwarz M-JSTakumi Shibano TSh* Tom Shippey TS* John Sladek
JS ** Krzysztof Sokolowski KSBrian Stableford BS* Tony Sudbery TSuDarko
Suvin DS** Braulio Tavares BT** Sheldon Teitelbaum ST** Ron Tiner RT**
Igor Tolokonnikov IT** Neal Tringham NT** Lisa Tuttle LT** Hermann Urbanek
HU** Janeen Webb JW** Steve Whitaker SW** Chris Williamson CW** Ralph
Willingham RW** Wu Dingbo WD ** Zoran Zivkovic ZZ Tim Adye is a member of
the M.H. Zool group, members of which were collaboratively responsible for
the Bloomsbury Good Reading Guide to Science Fiction and Fantasy (1989);
several Zool group members made individual contributions here, and are
identified below. Zoran Bekric and Brian Forte are freelance writers,
based in South Australia, who have expertise in comics. Matt Bishop is
with the Zool group. Stanislav Cermak is a Czech film critic and sf fan.
Jacques Chambon is a French sf critic and publisher. Adrian Cox is with
the Zool group. J.A. Dautzenberg is a Dutch college teacher and literary
critic for a national newspaper, De Volksrant. Hugh Davies is a UK
composer and musicologist. Jane Donawerth is a Professor of English at the
University of Maryland at College Park, with a specilized interest in
women's literature. John Eggeling is a UK antiquarian bookseller and
expert in early sf publishing. John Grandidge is with the Zool group. Jon
Gustafson is a US art and artbook appraiser, expert in sf art, who has had
a column on the subject in Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine. Rob Hansen is
a UK fan, expert on the history of (in particular) UK fandom, as shown in
his fanzine Then. Patrick Nielsen Hayden is a senior editor at Tor Books.
Penny Heal and Colin A. Johnson are with the Zool group. John-Henri
Holmberg is a Swedish editor and critic, author of several books on sf.
Jorg Kastner is a German sf author and critic, whose criticism has
appeared in Science Fiction Times. Robert K.J. Killheffer is Books Editor
of Omni Magazine. Michael Klossner is a US critic with special interest in
sf in film and tv, and a frequent contributor to SFRA Review. Robert Louit
is a French critic, journalist and translator who has also been an sf book
editor. Murray MacLachlan is a New Zealand freelance writer with a special
interest in sf. Charles Shaar Murray is a UK rock-music critic and
historian, author of Shots from the Hip (coll 1991) and other books. Alan
Myers is a UK teacher of Russian, and translator from the Russian. Phil
Nichols is a video engineer and producer, for some time Information
Officer of the BSFA. Frank H. Parnell is an authority on sf and fantasy
magazines, compiler of Monthly Terrors: An Index to the Weird Fantasy
Magazines Published in the United States and Great Britain (1985). Ellen
Pedersen is a Danish critic and translator. A.B. Perkins, a UK researcher,
has a special interest in UK boys' sf of the 1950s. Phil Raines is with
the Zool group. Jenny Randles is an international researcher in ufology.
Peter Roberts was for many years a fanzine editor in the UK. Marcus
Rowland specializes in computers and games for a local education
authority. John Scarborough is a US professor of medical history. Tony
Sudbery is a lecturer in mathematics, and was for some time a regular sf
critic in Speculation and elsewhere. Ron Tiner is a UK book and comics
artist, and is author of Figure Drawing without a Model (1992). Igor
Tolokonnikov is one half of the Russian literary agency Baziat. Neil
Tringham, now with the Institut fur Astonomie & Astrophysik in Munich, was
also with Zool group. Hermanm Urbanek is a German fan and sf critic,
author of "SF in Germany", an occasional column in Locus. Janeen Webb is
an Australian lecturer in literature, with a specialized interest in sf
and fantasy, both for children and adults. Steve Whitaker is a comics
historian, teacher, critic, strip cartoonist and colourist. Chris
Williamson is with the Zool group. Ralph Willingham is the US author of a
PhD dissertation, "Science Fiction and the Theatre.".

Cole's The Struggle for Empire
The first major novel to adopt an interstellar venue, Robert W. COLE'sThe
Struggle for Empire: A Story of the Year 2236 anticipated the pulp SPACE
OPERA genre, with its fast-paced space battles and grand scale.

Campbell's Twilight
First published under a pseudonym, John W. CAMPBELL's moody and evocative
tale was unlike either his previous fiction or the fiction he later
published as editor of Astounding.

Campbell editor of Astounding
An influential and rising young SF writer when he took the position as
editor of Astounding, John W. CAMPBELL abandoned his writing career but
became the most influential editor in SF history.

Campbell's Who Goes There?
The basis for the SF horror movie, THE THING, John W. CAMPBELL's tale of
a shape-changing alien attacking an Antarctic research station epitomizes
the strengths of American pulp fiction.

Cordwainer Smith's first story
Cordwainer SMITH publishes "Scanners Live in Vain"in an obscure SF
magazine after everyone else rejects it.

Clement's Mission of Gravity
One of the classics of hard science fiction, Hal CLEMENT's MISSION OF
GRAVITY is a tale of humans and aliens on an ultra high- GRAVITY world. It
was serialized in Astounding Science Fiction before being published by
Doubleday.

Clarke's Childhood's End
For many years Arthur C. CLARKE's most famous novel, and still one of his
best (and most popular), CHILDHOOD'S END is a tale of humanity growing
into transcendent adulthood - with the help of alien tutors.

Carter's Heroes and Villains
Angela CARTER's fourth novel, HEROES AND VILLAINS, is a post-holocaust
tale of considerable wit and subversive invention. Carter, a British
fabulist, is better known outside the SF world than within it.See Also:
FABULATION; POSTMODERNISM AND SF.

Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama
Arthur C. CLARKE's novel about a derelict spaceship won all the major
awards but not the critic's hearts. Still, RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA
communicated a sense of wonder that made it a hit with audiences and one
of the most popular SF novels of the 70s.See Also: BIG DUMB OBJECTS.

Crowley's Engine Summer
John CROWLEY's third novel, ENGINE SUMMER, is a dense and beautiful
meditation on memory, mortality, and consciousness; many readers consider
it one of the finest SF novels ever written.

Cherryh's Downbelow Station
A central work in C.J. CHERRYH's future history, DOWNBELOW STATION is her
finest early novel. It won the HUGO Award.

Card's Ender's Game
Based on his 1977 story, Orson Scott CARD's 1985 novel, ENDER'S GAME, won
both the NEBULA and HUGO Awards and remains his best-known work.

Divine Endurance
JONES, GWYNETH(Allen & Unwin, 1984)On a FAR-FUTURE Earth, in an isolated
citadel in central Asia, live the IMMORTAL cat Divine Endurance and the
last of the manufactured humans, Chosen Among the Beautiful. When the
machines that imprison them finally cease functioning, they venture forth
into the wasteland to see the world. In Southeast Asia they find what
might well be the last human civilization on Earth. Cho was created with
the need to fulfill human desires, but the people she meets find her
presence to be at best a mixed blessing. A densely written and difficult
novel, with a touch of Jack Vance, though lacking his wittiness and of
radically different political sensibility. Compare Joan Slonczewski's A
Door into Ocean.

Dhalgren
DELANY, SAMUEL R(AY)(Bantam, 1975)To the depopulated city of Bellona,
which is subjected to occasional distortions of time and space, comes a
youthful hero hungry for experience and keen to develop his powers as a
creative artist. A dense and multilayered novel that alienated some
readers who had previously applauded Delany's colorful fantastic romances,
but that reached a much wider audience. Convoluted and fascinating, it
remains one of the key works of avant-garde SF, by an author determined to
extend the limits of the genre. See also FABULATION

Dune
HERBERT, FRANK(Chilton, 1965)The first of a seven-volume bestselling
series is the story of a selectively bred messiah who acquires paranormal
powers by use of the spice that is the main product of the desert planet
Arrakis, and uses these powers to prepare for the ecological renewal of
the world. Politics and metaphysics are tightly bound into a remarkably
detailed and coherent pattern; an imaginative tour de force. The series as
a whole is overinflated, the later revisitations of the theme being
prompted more by market success than the discovery of new things to do
with it. The series demonstrates how a good SF writer's ability to build a
coherent and convincing hypothetical world can serve the purpose of making
philosophical and sociological questions concrete; the series thus becomes
a massive thought experiment in social philosophy, and is more
considerable as such than Isaac Asimov's FOUNDATION series or Marion
Zimmer Bradley's Darkover series. Hugo winner, 1966; Nebula winner, 1965.
See also ECOLOGY

The Dying Earth
VANCE, JACK (pseud. of John Holbrook Vance)(Hillman, 1950)A hauntingly
beautiful story of a FAR FUTURE Earth "steeped," as Norman Spinrad has put
it, "in magic born of rotting history." Scientific experiment has given
place to charms and enchantments that really work. Six loosely connected
episodes derive not from technophile Golden Age SF but from a quite
antithetical tradition: the world-ends-in-magic milieu explored in the
1930s by Clark Ashton Smith, and picaresque sword-and-sorcery such as
Fritz Leiber's early-forties Fafhrd and Gray Mouser tales, with a dash
(Chapter 5) of Lord Dunsany. A slender thread of scientific hope is held
out in the concluding episode, whose hero, given since childhood to how
and why questions and driven by doubts about an approach to reality in
which magic spells are learned by rote, makes his way through strange
landscapes and degenerate towns to the Museum of Man. But that hope of a
scientific renaissance was not to be realized in this novel's several
sequels, good as some of them were as stories. Little noticed at initial
publication, this work launched a whole subgenre of fictional futures in
which magic replaces science, a development not altogether healthy for
science fiction or implicitly for the place of science in modern
civilization. Interestingly, a countertrend has appeared in the fantasy
field, of formerly effective magic that became displaced by the emergent
scientific world view of the 17th century, as in Tim Powers's On Stranger
Tides (Ace, 1988).

Dragon's Egg
FORWARD, ROBERT L(ULL)(Ballantine, 1980)A race that evolves on the
surface of a neutron star lives on a vastly compressed time scale, but
nevertheless manages to make contact with human observers. A fascinating
and ingenious example of hard SF. Its representation of SCIENTISTS at work
compares with Gregory Benford's Timescape. In the sequel, Starquake
(1985), the aliens achieve technological sophistication, are returned to
primitivism by a "starquake," and rebuild their civilization-a process
that takes several of their generations but only 24 hours of our time.
Compare John Brunner's The Crucible of Time (1984).

Dangerous Visions
ELLISON, HARLAN, ed.(Doubleday, 1967)The first big hardcover anthology of
original SF stories-a classic that launched a publishing vogue as well as
providing a manifesto for the American NEW WAVE. Ellison's combative
introductions set off the stories superbly, though some of the efforts at
"taboo-breaking" now seem a little sophomoric. A very influential book,
followed by the even bigger and equally fine Again, Dangerous Visions
(1972). An endlessly promised volume, The Last Dangerous Visions, was the
subject of a scathing pamphlet by Christopher Priest, The Last Deadloss
Visions (1987), reprinted with revisions as The Book on the Edge of
Forever (Fantagraphics Books, 1994).

Dreamsnake
MCLNTYRE, VONDA N(EEL)(Houghton Mifflin, 1978)Novel based on the short
story "Of Mist and Grass and Sand" (Nebula winner, 1973). A healer whose
instruments are metabolically engineered snakes must journey to a city
that has contacts with the star worlds in the hope of replacing the
dreamsnake that eases the pain of her clients. A convincing mixture of
stoicism and sentimentality, rather highly strung. Compare James Tiptree's
Up the Walls of the World . Nebula winner, 1978; Hugo winner, 1979. See
also HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

Davy
PANGBORN, EDGAR(St. Martin's, 1964)Nuclear war is now 300 years in the
past, but the world is still a primitive place. The title character begins
life as a bondsman and grows to become a great leader. Though his intent
is serious, Pangborn's tone is satirical and a bit bawdy throughout.
Numerous critics have noticed similarities between Davy and Henry
Fielding's Tom Jones. Set in the same postholocaust world are The Judgment
of Eve (1966), The Company of Glory (1975), and stories found in the
collection Still I Persist in Wondering (1978). Compare Walter M. Miller's
A CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ and John Crowley's ENGINE SUMMER . See also
HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

Downbelow Station
CHERRYH, C. J. (pseud. of Carolyn Janice Cherry)(DAW, 1981)Political
space opera set on the star station Pell, caught in the middle of the
conflict for control of humankind's fragile interstellar " EMPIRE."
Complex and multifaceted: the many-sided conflict provides action and
intrigue while the central characters try to construct viable personal
relationships and work out careers in a fluid situation. The novel is a
key work in an elaborate future history used as a background for several
other novels, including Merchanter's Luck and Voyager in Night (1984).
Hugo winner, 1982

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
DICK, PHILIP K(INDRED)(Doubleday, 1968)In a future where technological
sophistication has made the ersatz virtually indistinguishable from the
real, the hero is a bounty hunter who must track down and eliminate
ANDROIDS passing for human. But android animals are routinely passed off
as real by people trying to purge human guilt for having exterminated so
many living species, and the new messiah is an artificial construct; so
what is the difference between the human and the android? A key novel in
Dick's canon. The film, Blade Runner, is a very pale echo. We Can Build
You (1972) further explores the ambiguity of such distinctions as
human/android and sane/schizophrenic in a haunting story of people who
create machines more human than themselves.

Dorsai!
DICKSON, GORDON R(UPERT)(DAW, 1976)Revised version of The Genetic General
(1960), the first volume in one of the more popular science fiction
series. Some of the later books in the series are, in whole or in part,
revised versions of earlier books. The Dorsai are the greatest soldiers in
the galaxy, having developed a mercenary culture in order to gain the
capital necessary to survive on a resource-poor planet. In Dickson's
universe humanity has fragmented into three basic genetically determined
types-men of faith, of WAR, and of philosophy-with the Dorsai exemplifying
men of war. The three types, however, are destined to come together again
to form a new, higher type of human being called the Ethical-Responsible
Man. Donal Graeme, Dorsai, military genius, and psychic SUPERMAN, is the
first of this new kind of human being. Dickson has outlined an ambitious
plan to write a dozen novels describing the evolution of the
Ethical-Responsible Man from our past, through the present, and into the
future, called the Childe Cycle. So far none of the novels set in the past
or present have appeared, and it seems unlikely that they will. The early
Dorsai novels were primarily action-adventure of a superior sort. The
later novels have become increasingly philosophical and perhaps a bit
long-winded. Compare David Drake's Hammer's Slammers (1979) and its
sequels and Jerry Pournelle's The Mercenaryand sequels.

Dragonflight
MCCAFFREY, ANNE(Ballantine, 1968)First of the Pern series, combining the
novellas "Weyr Search" (Hugo winner, 1968) and "Dragonrider" (Nebula
winner, 1968). Immediate sequels are Dragonquest (1971) and the
best-selling The White Dragon (1978); these novels appear in an omnibus
asThe Dragonriders of Pern (1978). An associated trilogy aimed at younger
readers is Dragonsong (1976), Dragonsinger (1977), and Dragondrums (1979).
Later novels set on Pern include Moreta, Dragonlady of Pern (1983),
Nerika's Story (1986), Dragonsdawn (1988), The Renegades of Pern (1989),
and All the Weyrs of Pern (1991). Pern is a lost colony where dragons
telepathically bonded to male riders breathe fire to burn up the spores of
deadly vegetable invaders that appear at long intervals. The dragons can
also travel through time whenever the plots require a deus ex machina.
Despite the commercial success of later volumes, the quality and
originality of the books decline somewhat as the series proceeds, although
the most recent addition, All the Weyrs of Pern, represents something of
an improvement. The author appears to have achieved in these novels a mode
and intensity of feeling that broke new ground in fitting SF to the
imaginative needs of alienated teenage girls, thus helping to break the
masculine mold of most previous SF. Compare Jacqueline Lichtenberg's
Sime/Gen series, beginning with House of Zeor (1974) and C. J. Cherryh 's
Morgaine series, beginning with Gates of Ivrel (1976), both of which show
McCaffrey's influence. See also COLONIZATION OF OTHER WORLDS

Death Qualified: A Mystery of Chaos
WILHELM, KATE(St. Martin's, 1991)Barbara Holloway, a former lawyer who
quit in disgust with the legal system, is persuaded to take her first case
in five years. A woman is accused of murdering her husband, whom she had
not seen for seven years prior to the day of his death. There's no real
motive, however, and Holloway quickly discovers that someone doesn't want
her on the case. Further, there is evidence that the deceased husband may
have been involved in some very peculiar scientific experiments in
PERCEPTION. For another novel that puts chaos theory to good use, compare
Arthur C. Clarke's The Ghost From the Grand Banks (1990). See also
SUPERMAN

Darker Than You Think
WILLIAMSON, JACK(Fantasy, 1948)Originally published in Unknown in 1940,
this may be Williamson's finest work-a pioneering effort to give "
SUPERNATURAL" phenomena, in this case Iycanthropy, a scientific rationale.
The science is a bit shaky from today's perspective, but the felt response
of the viewpoint character as a werewolf and in his other shape-changes,
is vivid and convincing. The experience also converts his purpose from a
stock pulp-heroic defense of humanity against the encroaching lycanthropes
to a Nitzschean "beyond good and evil" embrace of his antihuman role,
reminiscent of the change in the way the young giants are perceived in the
course of H. G. Wells's The Food of the Gods. In a sense this is a
variation on the Superman theme, except that it does not depict the
superbeings as benevolent toward humanity; their coming regime truly will
be "darker than you think." A Dell edition in 1979 reproduced the original
magazine illustrations by Edd Cartier. Compare Richard Matheson, I Am
Legend; contrast Olaf Stapledon, Odd John .

Doomsday Book
WILLIS, CONNIE(Bantam, 1992)Kivrin, a TIME TRAVELing history student from
21st-century Oxford, is sent back to the 14th century for her Practicum.
It's supposed to be a routine trip, but everything seems to go wrong at
once. Kivrin is accidently set down in the heart of the Black Plague and
soon falls ill. Worse still, 21st-century Oxford is also hit by some sort
of plague, making her immediate retrieval impossible. This is a grim, but
beautifully written novel, full of carefully drawn characters and
fascinating historical detail. It's one of the best tirne travel stories
ever written. The title piece from Willis's collection Fire Watch is set
in the same universe as Doomsday Book. Compare Mike McQuay's Memories and
Michael Bishop's NO ENEMY BUT TIME. Hugo winner, 1993; Nebula winner, 1992

The Dream Master
ZELAZNY, ROGER(Ace, 1966)Expanded from the novella "He Who Shapes"
(Nebula winner, 1965). A psychiatrist links minds with disturbed patients
to construct therapeutic dream experiences. He tries to train a blind
woman in the relevant techniques, despite opposition from her
intellectually augmented guide dog, and finds his own balance of mind
threatened. Compare Ursula K. Le Guin's THE LATHE OF HEAVEN and Greg
Bear's Queen of Angels. See also PSYCHOLOGY

Driftglass
DELANY, SAMUEL R(AY)(Doubleday, 1971)A collection of shorter works,
including the brilliant "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious
Stones" (Nebula winner, 1969) and "The Star Pit." A later, slightly
overlapping collection is Distant Stars (1981), which includes the short
novel, Empire Star (1966), a highly sophisticated space opera. See also
NEW WAVE

Dynamic Science Fiction
Dynamic Science Fiction, Jan. 1954 Published by Columbia Publications,
Inc. Cover illustration by Milton Luros (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc. (c) 1954 Columbia
Publications, Inc.)

Destinies
Destinies by James Baen Cover: Ace Books (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years, The
The Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years by Chingiz Aitmatov Cover:
Indiana University Press, 1988 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Indiana University Press. (c) 1988 Indiana University
Press.)

Dark Messiah
Dark Messiah by David Alexander Cover: Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.,
1987 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc. (c) 1987 Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.)

Deathstones, The
The Deathstones by E.L. Arch Cover: Avalon Books, 1964 illustration by Ed
Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Thomas Bouregy & Co. - Avalon Books (c) 1964 Avalon Books)

Daze, the Magician
Daze, the Magician by Anthony Baerlein Cover: Arthur Barker Ltd., 1936
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Arthur
Barker Ltd. (c) 1936 Arthur Barker Ltd. )

Deliver Me From Eva
Deliver Me From Eva by Paul Bailey Cover: Murray & Gee, 1946 illustration
by Jack Lynch (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Murray & Gee (c) 1946 Murray & Gee)

Demonists, The
The Demonists by David Gurney (Patrick Bair) Cover: Manor Books, 1971
Photo: Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Manor Books (c) 1971 Manor Books)

Drums of the Dark Gods
Drums of the Dark Gods by W.A. Ballinger (W. Howard Baker) Cover:
Dell/Mayflower Dell, 1966 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1966 Mayflower Dell)

Dakota Project, The
The Dakota Project by Jack Beeching Cover: Dell, 1971 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971
Dell Books)

Demigods, The
The Demigods by Alfred Bennett Cover: Jarrolds Publishers, 1939 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Jarrolds
Publishers Ltd. (c) 1939 Jarrolds Publishers)

Doomsday Clock
Doomsday Clock by Elizabeth Benoist Cover: The Naylor Co., 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. The Naylor Co. (c)
1975 The Naylor Co.)

Dread Visitor
Dread Visitor by Bryan Berry Cover: Panther Books/ Hamilton & Co., 1952
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1952 Panther
Books/Hamilton & Co.)

Dream of the Heroes, The
The Dream of the Heroes (El Sueno de los Heroes)by Adolfo Bioy Casares
Cover: Editorial Losada, SA, 1954 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Editorial Losada, SA (c) 1954 Editorial Losada, SA)

Doubting Thomas
Doubting Thomas by Winston Brebner Cover: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1958 (First
Edition) illustration by Graham Oakley (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Rupert Hart-Davis (c) 1958 Rupert Hart-Davis
London)

Death Star, The
The Death Star by T.C. Bridges Cover: HarperCollins/Collins, 1940
illustration by J. MacGillivray (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins
Publishers Limited. (c) 1940 Collins)

Deus ex Machina
Deus ex Machina by J.V. Brummels Cover: Bantam/Bantam Spectra, 1989
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1989 Bantam Spectra)

Doctor Jones' Picnic
Doctor Jones' Picnic by Samuel Chapman Cover: Whitaker & Ray Co., 1898
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Double Planet
Double Planet by Marcus Chown Cover: Avon Books, 1988 (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) 1988 Avon Books)

Day the Fish Came Out, The
The Day the Fish Came Out by Kay Cicellis Cover: Bantam, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1967 Bantam Books)

Dream Lords, The
The Dream Lords by Adrian Cole Cover: Zebra Books, 1975 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Zebra Books. (c) 1975 Zebra
Books )

Domesday Village
Domesday Village by Ian Colvin Cover: Falcon Press, 1948 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Falcon Press (c) 1948 Falcon
Press)

Da Vinci Machine, The
The Da Vinci Machine by Earl Conrad Cover: Modern Library Editions, 1968
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Modern
Library Editions (c) 1968 Modern Library Editions)

Devil Man from Mars, The
The Devil Man from Mars by James Corbett Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd.,
1935 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Random House UK Limited. (c) 1935 Herbert Jenkins Ltd.)

Daybreak
Daybreak by James Cowan Cover: George H. Richmond & Co., 1898 (First
Edition) illustration by Walter C. Greenough (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Drop in Infinity, A
A Drop in Infinity by Gerald Grogan Cover: John Lane, 1915, (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Day the Earth Froze, The
The Day the Earth Froze by Gerald Hatch Cover: Monarch Books, Inc., 1963
illustration by Ralph Brillhart (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1963 Monarch Books, Inc.)

Death Wind
Death Wind by William C. Heine Cover: Pyramid Books, 1974 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1974 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Devil's Elixir, The
The Devil's Elixir by E.T.A. Hoffman Cover: William Blackwood, Edinburgh,
1824 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Derelict
Derelict by Robert L. Hovorka Cover: Ace Books, 1988 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1988 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Different Drummer, A
A Different Drummer by William Melvin Kelly Cover: Bantam, 1964 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1964 Bantam Books)

Dragon Lensman, The
The Dragon Lensman by David A. Kyle Cover: Bantam, 1980 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1980
Bantam Books)

Drome
Drome by John Martin Leahy Cover: Fantasy Publishing, Inc., 1952
illustration by John Martin Leahy (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1952 Fantasy Publishing Co.)

Devil's Rain, The
The Devil's Rain by Maud Willis (Eileen Lottman) Cover: Dell, 1975 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1975 Dell Books)

Demon-4
Demon-4 by David Mace Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1984 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Day of Misjudgment
Day of Misjudgment by Bernard MacLaren Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1956
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1956 Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Doomsday, 1999
Doomsday, 1999 by Paul MacTyre Cover: Ace Books, 1962 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1962 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Dreamers, The
The Dreamers by Roger Manvell Cover: Bantam, 1963 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1963
Bantam Books)

Devil in Crystal, The
The Devil in Crystal by Louis Marlow Cover: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1944
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Faber and Faber Ltd. (c) 1944 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Dream Wall, The
The Dream Wall by Graham Dunstan Martin Cover: Unwin Hyman, 1987 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1987
Unwin Hyman)

Doom Star
Doom Star by Richard S. Meyers Cover: Carlyle Books, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1978 Carlyle
Books)

Dreamrider
Dreamrider by Sandra Miesel Cover: Ace Books, 1982 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1982 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Desert Eden
Desert Eden by J.M. Morgan Cover: Pinnacle Books, 1991 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Pinnacle Books (c) 1991
Pinnacle Books)

Duchess of Kneedeep, The
The Duchess of Kneedeep by Atanielle Annyn Noel Cover: Avon Books, 1986
(Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1986 Avon Books)

Dry Deluge, The
The Dry Deluge by Kathleen Nott Cover: Hogarth Press, 1947 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Hogarth Press (c) 1947 Hogarth Press)

Deluge, The
The Deluge by Robert Payne Cover: Lion Books, Inc., 1955 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Lion Books, Inc. (c) 1955
Lion Books, Inc.)

Dreams of an Unseen Planet
Dreams of an Unseen Planet by Teresa Plowright Cover: Arbor House, 1986
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Shown by permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1986
Arbor House)

Downriver
Downriver by Iain Sinclair Cover: HarperCollins/Paladin Grafton Books,
1991 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Paladin Grafton Books (c) 1991 Paladin Grafton Books)

David's Sling
David's Sling by Marc Stiegler Cover: Baen Books, 1988 illustration by
David Mattingly (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c)
1988 Baen Books)

Destiny's End
Destiny's End by Tim Sullivan Cover: Avon Books, 1988 illustration by Ron
Walotsky (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside.
Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1988 Avon Books)

Day of the Brown Horde, The
The Day of the Brown Horde by Richard Tooker Cover: Payson and Clarke
Ltd., 1926 (First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Payson and Clarke Ltd. (c) 1926 Payson and Clarke Ltd.)

Discovery of the Dead, The
The Discovery of the Dead by Allen Upward Cover: A.C. Fifield, 1910
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Published
by A.C. Fifield )

Dark Tower, The
The Dark Tower by Peter Vansittart Cover: Thomas Crowell Co., 1969
illustration by Richard Cuffari (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Thomas V.Crowell Co. (c) 1969 Thomas Crowell Co.)

Death over London
Death over London by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson Cover: Gateway, 1940
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gateway (c)
1940 Gateway)

Devolutionist and the Emancipatrix, The
The Devolutionist and the Emancipatrix by Homer Flint Cover: Ace Books,
1921 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1921 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Doomsday Eve
Doomsday Eve by Robert Moore Williams Cover: Ace Books, 1957 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1957 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Dr. Blood Money
Dr. Blood Money by Philip K. Dick Cover: Ace Books, 1965 (First Edition)
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing
Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1965 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Day of the Minotaur
Day of the Minotaur by Thomas Burnett Swann Cover: Ace Books (First
Edition) illustration by Gray Morrow (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1966 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Deeper than the Darkness
Deeper than the Darkness by Gregory Benford Cover: Ace Books, 1970 (First
Edition) illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1970 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Digging Leviathan, The
The Digging Leviathan by James P. Blaylock Cover: Ace Books, 1984 (First
Edition) illustration by James Gurney (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1984 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Divine Endurance
Divine Endurance by Gwyneth Jones Cover: Allen & Unwin, 1984 (First
Edition) illustration by Miller, Craig & Cocking (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1984
Allen & Unwin)

Demon Kind
Demon Kind ed. by Roger Elwood Cover: Avon Books (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1973 Avon Books)

A Deeper Sea
A Deeper Sea by Alexander Jablokov Cover: Avon Books/AvoNova (First
Edition) illustration by Eric Peterson (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1992 AvoNova)

Daughter of Elysium
Daughter of Elysium by Joan Slonczewski Cover: Avon Books/AvoNova (First
Edition) illustration by Tim Jacobus (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission
of Avon Books. (c) 1993 AvoNova)

Dover Beach
Dover Beach by Richard Bowker Cover: Bantam, 1987 illustration by Franco
Accornero (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Death World
Death World by Harry Harrison Cover: Bantam, 1960 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1960
Bantam Books)

Down the Stream of Stars
Down the Stream of Stars by Jeffrey A. Carver Cover: Bantam, 1990
illustration by Shusei (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1990
Bantam Books)

Dark Sky Legion
Dark Sky Legion by William Barton Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by Stephen Youll (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) Bantam Books)

Dark Universe
Dark Universe by Daniel F. Galouye Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by M. Hooks (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
Bantam Books)

Dhalgren
Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany Cover: Bantam, 1975 (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1975 Bantam Books)

Dream Years, The
The Dream Years by Lisa Goldstein Cover: Bantam (First Edition)
illustration by Larry Winborg& Jeffrey Mangiat (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1985 Bantam Books)

Doomsday Planet, The
The Doomsday Planet by Harl Vincent Cover: Tower, 1966 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Tower Books (c) 1966 Tower
Books)

Different Light, A
A Different Light by Elizabeth Lynn Cover: Berkley, 1978 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1978 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Dr. Adder
Dr. Adder by K.W. Jeter Cover: Tom Doherty Associates/TOR/Bluejay (First
Edition) illustration by Rhea Braustein (M. M. Kavanagh. Book jackets
reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books Inc. All rights reserved. (c)
1984 Bluejay Books Inc.)

Doings of Raffles, The
The Doings of Raffles by Arthur Conan Doyle Cover: George H. Doran Co.,
1919 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Dune
Dune by Frank Herbert Cover: Chilton, 1965 (First Edition) illustration
by John Schoenherr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1965 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Diadem from the Stars
Diadem from the Stars by Jo Clayton Cover: DAW Books, 1977 illustration
by Michael Whelan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1977 DAW
Books, Inc.)

Douglas Convolution, The
The Douglas Convolution by Edward Llewellyn Cover: DAW Books, 1979 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1979 DAW Books, Inc.)

Dragon's Egg
Dragon's Egg by Robert L.Forward Cover: New English Library, 1980 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1980 New English Library)

Door into Fire, The
The Door into Fire by Diane Duane Cover: Dell, 1979 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1979
Dell Books)

Dragon in the Sea, The
The Dragon in the Sea by Frank Herbert Cover: Avon Books, 1967
illustration by John Schoenherr (Casey Brown/Eaton Collection, University
of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1967 Avon
Books)

Dangerous Visions
Dangerous Visions by Harlan Ellison Cover: Doubleday, 1967 (First
Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1967 Doubleday)

Decouverte Australe, La
La Decouverte Australe by Restif de la Bretonne Cover: 1781 (First
Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. )

Desolation Road
Desolation Road by Ian McDonald Cover: Bantam (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1988 Bantam Books)

Difference Engine, The
The Difference Engine by William Gibson & Bruce Sterling Cover: Victor
Gollancz Ltd., 1990 (First Edition) illustration by Ian Miller (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1990
Victor Gollancz Ltd.)

Devil Rides Out, The
The Devil Rides Out by Dennis Wheatley Cover: Bantam, 1967 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1967 Bantam Books)

Devil Tree of El Dorado, The
The Devil Tree of El Dorado by Frank Aubrey Cover: New Amersterdam, 1987
illustration by Leigh Ellis & Fred Hyland (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. New Amsterdam. (c) 1987 New
Amsterdam)

Death of Grass, The
The Death of Grass by John Christopher Cover: Joseph, 1956 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Joseph (c) 1956
Michael Joseph Ltd. London)

Double Feature
Double Feature by Emma Bull & Will Shetterly Cover: NESFA Press (First
Edition) illustration by Nicholas Jainschigg (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover
Illustration: Nicholas Jainschigg. (c) 1994 NESFA Press)

Days Between Stations
Days Between Stations by Steve Erickson Cover: Posideon Press (First
Edition) illustration by George Corsillo (M. M. Kavanagh. Posideon Press
(c) 1985 Posideon Press)

Day of the Drones, The
The Day of the Drones by A.M. Lightner Cover: Bantam, 1970 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission
of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group,
Inc. (c) 1970 Bantam Books)

Dome World
Dome World by Dean McLaughlin Cover: Pyramid Books, 1962 illustration by
Ed Emshwiller (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All
rights reserved. (c) 1962 Pyramid Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Dr. Grimshaw's Secret
Dr. Grimshaw's Secret by Nathaniel Hawthorne Title Page: Riverside Press,
1882 (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. )

Denner's Wreck
Denner's Wreck by Lawrence Watt-Evans Cover: Science Fiction Book Club,
1988 illustration by Ron Walotsky (M. M. Kavanagh. Jacket: Ron Walotsky.
Reprinted with permission of Doubleday Book and Music Clubs, Inc. (c) 1988
Doubleday Book & Music Clubs, Inc.)

Demolished Man, The
The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester Cover: Shasta, 1953 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Erle Melvin Korshak. (c) 1953 Shasta)

Davy
Davy by Edgar Pangborn Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1964 (First Edition)
illustration by Robert Finegold (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover: Robert Finegold.
Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1964 St. Martin's Press)

Dragon Lord, The
The Dragon Lord by David Drake Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration by
Steve Hickman (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c)
1982 Tor Books)

Dr. Grimshaw's Secret
Dr. Grimshaw's Secret by Nathaniel Hawthorne Frontispiece illustration:
Riverside Press, 1882 (First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Riverside Press. )

Downbelow Station
Downbelow Station by C.J. Cherryh Cover: DAW Books, 1981 illustration by
Rego (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c)
1981 DAW Books, Inc.)

Dorsai!
Dorsai! by Gordon R. Dickson Cover: TOR, 1993 illustration by Royo (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1993 Tor Books)

Diamond Age, The
The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson Cover: Bantam, 1995 illustration by
Bruce Jensen (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Dragon Masters, The
The Dragon Masters by Jack Vance Cover: Ace Books, 1971 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1971 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Death Qualified
Death Qualified by Kate Wilhelm Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1991 (First
Edition) illustration by Doris Borowsky (M.M. Kavanagh. Cover: Doris
Borowsky. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1991 St. Martin's Press)

Darker than You Think
Darker than You Think by Jack Williamson Cover: Lancer Books, 1963 (M. M.
Kavanagh.Lancer Books (c) 1963 Lancer)

Doomsday Book
Doomsday Book by Connie Willis Cover: Bantam, 1992 (First Edition)
illustration by Jacobus (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1992
Bantam Books)

Dream Master, The
The Dream Master by Roger Zelazny Cover: Ace Books, 1966 (First Edition)
illustration by Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with
The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1966 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth, and Other Stories, The
The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth, and Other Stories by Roger
Zelazny Cover: Avon Books, 1974 illustration by Jeff Jones (M. M.
Kavanagh. Shown by permission of Avon Books. (c) 1974 Avon Books)

Dann, Jack
Jack Dann (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

De Camp, L. Sprague
L. Sprague De Camp (1907- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

De Lint, Charles
Charles De Lint (1951- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Delany, Samuel R.
Samuel R. Delany (1942- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Denton, Bradley
Bradley Denton (1958- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Dickson, Gordon
Gordon R. Dickson (1923- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Donaldson, Stephen R.
Stephen R. Donaldson (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Dozois, Gardner
Gardner Dozois (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Drake, David A.
David A. Drake (1945- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Duane, Diane E.
Diane E. Duane (1952- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle, [Sir] Arthur Conan (1859-1930) ( Bettmann. )

Dickens, Charles
Charles Dickens (1812-1870) ( Bettmann. )

Douglas, Carole Nelson
Carole Nelson Douglas (1944- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Durrell, Lawrence
Lawrence Durrell (1912-1990) ( Bettmann. )

del Rey, Lester
Lester del Rey (1915- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Disch, Thomas M.
Thomas M. Disch (1940- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Davidson, Avram
Avram Davidson (1923- ) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Dick, Philip K.
Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) (Jay Kay Klein. (c) 1995 Jay Kay Klein)

Downing, Paula E.
Paula E. Downing (1951- ) (T. Jackson King. (c) 1995 T. Jackson King)

Delany, Samuel (Technology & Magic)
Samuel Delany on the relationship between technology and magic. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Delany, Samuel (Technology & Magic)
Samuel Delany on the relationship between technology and magic. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Dunn, J.R.
J.R. Dunn ( ? - ) (M. M. Kavanagh. (c) 1995 M. M. Kavanagh)

Dowling, Terry
Terry Dowling (1947- ) (Catriona Sparks. (c) 1995 Catriona Sparks)

Destination Moon
The success of Destination Moon (George Pal/Eagle-Lion, 1950) initiated
the 1950s boom in science fiction movies, few of which possessed the
high-minded aspirations of this low-keyed, semi-documentary film. Based
(very loosely) on Robert Heinlein's Rocket Ship Galileo, it eschewed the
sensationalism associated with most 1950s SF films to attempt a realistic
dramatization of the first trip to the Moon. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood
Movie Posters. )

Doctor X
An early Technicolor film, Doctor X (First National/Warner Brothers,
1932) combines elements of SF, horror, and mystery. Its SF element - an
emotionally unstable scientist wreaking havoc with the aid of short-lived
artificial flesh - is put to more sophisticated use in the 1990 film
Darkman. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Donovan's Brain
From Felix Feist's adaptation of Curt Siodmak's novel, Donovan's Brain
(Dowling Productions/United Artists, 1953) is memorable more for its
performance by Lew Ayres - who comes under the telepathic power of the
evil brain he has kept alive in a tank - than for its anticipation of some
elements of cybernetics. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Dr. No
The first of the James Bond movies, Dr. No (Eon/United Artists, 1962) set
the stage for three decades worth of semi-sciencefictional thrillers
involving supervillains, attempts to take over the world, and implements
of doom. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

del Rey's Nerves
Lester DEL REY's story of disaster, panic, and coverup at a NUCLEAR
POWERplant was prophetic in many respects.

Dianetics article in Astounding
Upon publishing his essay on his home-grown science of DIANETICS, L. Ron
HUBBARD abandoned his career as a pulp SF writer and devoted himself to
Dianetics and (later) SCIENTOLOGY.

Davidson's The Golem
Combining elements of SF, historical fantasy, and contemporary humor,
Avram DAVIDSON's novel of a GOLEM in Southern California is a classic of
American humor.

Dickson's Dorsai!
Gordon DICKSON's sequence of genetic supermen and the destiny of humanity
began in 1959.

Dick's Palmer Eldritch
One of the first SF novels to deal with the existential horrors of
hallucinogenic drug abuse, THE THREE STIGMATA OF PALMER ELDRITCH is one of
Philip K. DICK's best and most famous novels.

Dangerous Visions
Announced as "a revolutionary book", Harlan ELLISON's DANGEROUS VISIONS,
an anthology of 32 ambitious stories, overturned conventions and broke new
ground for science fiction.

Disch's Camp Concentration
Thomas M. DISCH's novel of mind-altering experiments carried out on
anti-war dissidents seemed aggressively NEW WAVE, but CAMP CONCENTRATION
develops several classic SF themes.

Delany's Nova
Samuel R. DELANY had won the Nebula Award for his previous two novels,
but achieved true SF fame for NOVA, a pyrotechnic SF retelling of the
Prometheus legend.

Davidson's The Phoenix and the Mirror
Avram DAVIDSON's magisterial account of Vergil the Sorceror is one of the
finest accounts of the science in Renaissance magic, and has influenced
numerous SF and fantasy writers.

Delany's Dhalgren
Samuel R. DELANY's first SF novel in seven years, the 879-page DHALGREN
seemed an unreadable self-indulgence to many readers. It nevertheless
found a large and enthusiastic audience.

Del Rey Books launched
Judy-Lynn DEL REY made DEL REY BOOKS a major commercial powerhouse,
especially in genre fantasy. Many Del Rey books became best-sellers.

Dick's Valis
Philip K. Dick's first novel in four years, VALIS was an anguished work
that suggested a religious solution to Dick's 1970s spiritual crises. His
final two novels would continue this theme.

Dune opens
David Lynch's film, DUNE, based on the novel by Frank HERBERT, was deeply
idiosyncratic and proved a major box-office failure.

E Pluribus Unicorn
STURGEON, THEODORE(Abelard, 1953)Thirteen fine, emotionally intense
stories, ranging from "The World Well Lost," probably the first serious
and sympathetic treatment in magazine SF of homosexuality, to "The
Professor's Teddy Bear," in the most horrific Weird Tales tradition; from
the touching love story "A Saucer of Loneliness" to a celebration of jazz
musicianship (by one who understood what he was writing about), "Die,
Maestro, Die!" Sturgeon's forte was telling stories about people at the
edge, and treating them with compassion and nonjudgmentally even when they
acted as shockingly as at the climax of "A Way of Thinking." A showcase
for a very talented writer, which can be interestingly compared with the
earlier collection of Sturgeon's Golden Age work, Without Sorcery.

Earth Abides
STEWART, GEORGE R(IPPEY)(Random, 1949)In a near future, a plague
devastates humankind, leaving isolated pockets of survivors. The story
follows the fortunes of one group in the San Francisco Bay area, who
subsist for quite some time on the bounties of civilization that have
remained intact. But the subtler social fabric, formerly held together by
the cooperation of large numbers of people, is too much for this handful
to sustain. With a mournful backward look at the millions of now-doomed
volumes in the University of California library, the protagonist teaches
the new children how to make bows and arrows. He lives long enough to see
society forming itself anew at the tribal level. He himself is fated to be
misremembered as a legendary culture-hero. The quotation from which the
title derives (Ecclesiastes 1:4) is apt. Compare Jack London, "The Scarlet
Plague" (in The Science Fiction of Jack London); Stephen King's THE STAND
; Mary Shelley, The Last Man. First winner of the International Fantasy
Award, 1951; a major work. See also HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

Eon
BEAR, GREG(Bluejay, 1985)World War III looms as an asteroid starship
mysteriously orbiting Earth is taken over by Americans, who discover that
it is an artifact from the future that offers a gateway to infinite
opportunity. Hard SF unfolding into vast realms of possibilities. In the
sequel, Eternity (1988), humans explore the seemingly endless corridor of
the Way and the alternate universes and time periods that lead off it.
Compare Robert Reed's Down the Bright Way. See also BIG DUMB OBJECTS

Extra(ordinary) People
RUSS, JOANNA(St. Martin's, 1984)A collection of linked stories,
deliberately didactic in form, in which liberated women in different
societies challenge the forces of oppression. Includes "Souls" (Hugo
winner, 1983). As with The Female Man , the result is multifaceted and the
call for a revolution in sexual politics is eloquent even though the
stories retain a full appreciation of the difficulty of compiling a
manifesto for a nonsexist society. Other, more varied, collections are The
Zanzibar Cat (1984), which features the Nebula Award-winning "When It
Changed," the seed story for The Female Man, and The Hidden Side of the
Moon (1988), which includes such stories as "The Dirty Little Girl" and
"Reasonable People. See also FEMINISM"

Ender's Game
CARD, ORSON SCOTT(Tor, 1985)The CHILD hero is subjected to horrific
manipulation by the military in order to make him the perfect commander
able to annihilate the insectile aliens who have twice attacked the solar
system. Based on a novelette, the expanded version includes much
discussion of moral propriety and undergoes a dramatic ideological shift
at the end, but remains in many ways a sophisticated power fantasy. Grimly
fascinating. The sequel, Speaker for the Dead (1986; Hugo winner, 1987;
Nebula winner, 1986), takes off from the climactic shift in perspective to
construct a very different story in which Ender becomes a more Christ-like
savior. The third book in the series, Xenocide (1991; HN, 1992), is most
notable for a new subplot, the story of a world whose future leaders are
genetically engineered for brilliance, but also for a crippling
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder designed to limit their power. The ending of
the novel is weak, shifting into wish fulfillment fantasy. Compare Robert
A. Heinlein's STARSHIP TROOPERS , Joe Haldeman's THE FOREVER WAR, and Dave
Wolverton's On My Way to Paradise (1989). Hugo winner, 1986; Nebula
winner, 1985

Emphyrio
VANCE, JACK(Doubleday, 1969) The protagonist must travel to Earth to
recover the knowledge necessary to free his world from the cultural
rigidity imposed on it by alien rulers. Picks up themes from earlier Vance
novels, including The Languages of Pao , to further illustrate the
author's fascination with colorful, exotic cultures and messianic rebels
against their stagnation. See also SOCIOLOGY

Engine Summer
CROWLEY, JOHN(Doubleday, 1979)In a far-future America returned to
agrarian primitivism by disaster, the hero has recorded for future
generations the story of his youthful quest for enlightenment. Beautifully
written and eloquently argued; it can be appreciated even by those who
lack sympathy with the ideology behind its Arcadian romanticism. Compare
Ursula K. Le Guin's ALWAYS COMING HOME. See also HOLOCAUST AND AFTER

Extrapolation
Extrapolation, Winter 1992 Published by Kent State University Press (Casy
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of The
Kent State University Press. (c) 1992 Kent State University Press.)

Empire of the Senseless
Empire of the Senseless by Kathy Acker Cover: Grove Press, 1988 (First
Edition) illustration by George Corsillo (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
(c) 1988 Grove Press)

Eternal Enemy, The
The Eternal Enemy by Michael Berlyn Cover: William Morrow & Co., 1990
(First Printing) illustration by Vincent Di Fate (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of William
Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1990 William Morrow & Co., Inc.)

Even a Worm
Even a Worm by J.S. Bradford Cover: Arthur Barker Ltd., 1936 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Arthur Barker Ltd.
(c) 1936 Arthur Barker Ltd. )

Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, The
The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit by Storm Constantine Cover:
MacDonald & Co., 1987 illustration by Kenny McHendry (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Macdonald & Co. (c) 1987
MacDonald & Co.)

Encounter Program
Encounter Program by Robert Enstrom Cover: Doubleday, 1977 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1977 Doubleday & Co.)

Eternal Moment, The
The Eternal Moment by E.M. Forster Cover: Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd., 1928
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Sidgwick &
Jackson Ltd. (c) 1928 Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd.)

Elixir, The
The Elixir by James N. Frey Cover: Zebra Books, 1986 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1986 Zebra Books
(Kensigton Publishing Corp.) )

Exit Sherlock Holmes
Exit Sherlock Holmes by Robert Lee Hall Cover: Playboy Press Paperbacks,
1977 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1977 Playboy Press. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Earthquake, The
The Earthquake by W. Holt-White Cover: E. Grant Richards, 1906 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Earth Lies Sleeping
Earth Lies Sleeping by Laurence James Cover: Zebra Books, 1974 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1974 Zebra
Books)

Erone
Erone by Chalmers Kearney Cover: The Commodore Press Ltd., 1945 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1945 The
Commodore Press Ltd.)

English Revolution of the Twentieth Century, The
The English Revolution of the Twentieth Century by Henry Lazarus Cover:
F.L. Ballin, 1897 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Etidorhpa
Etidorhpa by John Uri Lloyd Cover: John Uri Lloyd, 1895 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. John Uri Lloyd )

Extrapolasis
Extrapolasis by Alexander Malec Cover: Modern Library Editions, 1967
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1967
Modern Library Editions)

Elephant, The
The Elephant by Slawomir Mrozek Cover: Macdonald & Co., 1962 illustration
by Daniel Uroz (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Macdonald & Co. (c) 1962 MacDonald & Co.)

Exercise for Madmen, An
An Exercise for Madmen by Barbara Paul Cover: Berkley, 1978 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1978 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Egghead Republic, The
The Egghead Republic by Arno Schmidt Cover: Marion Books, 1982
illustration by Imre Reiner (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Marion Books (c) 1982 Marion Books)

Eclipse
Eclipse by John Shirley Cover: Bluejay International, 1985 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Book jackets
reprinted by permission of Bluejay Books Inc. All rights reserved. (c)
1985 Bluejay Books Inc.)

Empty World, The
The Empty World by D.E. Stevenson Cover: Herbert Jenkins Ltd., 1936
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of
Random House UK Limited. (c) 1936 Herbert Jenkins Ltd.)

Eagles Restrained
Eagles Restrained by Brian Tunstall Cover: Edinburgh Press, 1936 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Edinburgh Press
(c) 1936 Edinburgh Press)

Ether Ore
Ether Ore by H.C. Turk Cover: TOR, 1987 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of Tor
Books. (c) 1987 Tor Books)

Elleander Morning
Elleander Morning by Jerry Yulsman Cover: TOR, 1984 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1984 Tor Books)

Eye in the Sky
Eye in the Sky by Philip K. Dick Cover: Ace Books, 1957 illustration by
Kelly Freas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1957 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Einstein Intersection, The
The Einstein Intersection by Samuel R. Delany Cover: Ace Books, 1967
(First Edition) illustration by Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1967 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Eclipse of Dawn, The
The Eclipse of Dawn by Gordon Eklund Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1971 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Escape Plans
Escape Plans by Gwyneth Jones Cover: Allen & Unwin (First Edition)
illustration by Lionel Jeans (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
HarperCollins Publishers Limited. (c) 1986 Allen & Unwin)

Edge of Tomorrow, The
The Edge of Tomorrow by Howard Fast Cover: Bantam, 1961 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1961
Bantam Books)

Emergence
Emergence by David Palmer Cover: Bantam, 1984 illustration by Mark
Harrison (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1984 Bantam Books)

Ecotopia
Ecotopia by Ernest Callenbach Cover: Banyan Tree, 1975 illustration by
Patricia Tobacco Forrester (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. (c) 1975 Banyan Tree)

Emprise
Emprise by Michael P. Kube-McDowell Cover: Berkley, 1985 illustration by
Ron Miller (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1985 The Berkley Publishing
Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Eater of Darkness, The
The Eater of Darkness by Robert Coates Cover: Contact Editions, 1929
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Contact
Editions (c) 1929 Contact Editions)

Exiles of Time
Exiles of Time by Nelson Bond Cover: Prime Press, 1949 illustration by
James Gibson (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Prime Press (c) 1949 Prime Press Philadelphia )

Engine Summer
Engine Summer by John Crowley Cover: Doubleday, 1979 (First Edition)
illustration by Gary Friedman (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c)
1979 Doubleday)

Eye of the Queen, The
The Eye of the Queen by Phillip Mann Cover: Arbor House, 1983
illustration by Loretta Trezzo (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c)
1983 Arbor House)

Embedding, The
The Embedding by Ian Watson Cover: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1973 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Reprinted with the permission of Victor Gollancz Ltd. (c) 1973 Victor
Gollancz Ltd.)

Essential Ellison, The
The Essential Ellison by Harlan Ellison Cover: Nemo Press, 1987 (First
Edition) illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Nemo Press
(c) 1987 Nemo Press)

Evil Is Live Spelled Backwards
Evil Is Live Spelled Backwards by Andew J. Offutt Cover: Paperback
Library, 1970 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Paperback Library (c) 1970 Paperback Library)

Eye, The
The Eye by Vladimir Nabokov Cover: Phaedra (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Phaedra (c) 1965 Phaedra)

Eyes in the Fire
Eyes in the Fire by Deborah Grabien Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1988
(First US Edition) illustration by Steven Rydberg (M. M. Kavanagh. Cover:
Steven Rydberg. Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1988 St. Martin's
Press)

Eon
Eon by Greg Bear Cover: TOR, 1985 illustration by Ron Miller (M. M.
Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1985 Tor Books)

Elvissey
Elvissey by Jack Womack Cover: TOR, 1993 (First Edition) illustration by
John Berkey (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c)
1993 Tor Books)

Erewhon
Erewhon by Samuel Butler Cover: Turbner, 1872 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Extra(ordinary) People
Extra(ordinary) People by Joanna Russ Cover: The Women's Press, 1985
illustration by Judith Clute (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of The Women's
Press, London. (c) 1985 The Women's Press)

Enemy Stars, The
The Enemy Stars by Poul Anderson Cover: Berkley, 1965 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights
reserved. (c) 1965 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication
or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Ender's Game
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card Cover: TOR, 1994 illustration by John
Harris (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1994 Tor
Books)

Emphyrio
Emphyrio by Jack Vance Cover: Dell, 1970 (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by
Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1970 Dell Books)

Effinger, George Alec
George Alec Effinger (1947- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Etchemendy, Nancy
Nancy Etchemendy (1952- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Ellison, Harlan
Harlan Ellison (1934- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Eco, Umberto
Umberto Eco (1932- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Emshwiller, Carol
Carol Emshwiller (1921- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Ecology
SF writers are among the small group of people who ponder the future of a
planet with limited resources and who imagine, in fictional terms, what
might happen if humans don't adapt to a rapidly changing world. ( (c)
Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Eshbach, Lloyd Arthur
Lloyd Arthur Eshbach (1910- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I.
Porter)

Edmondson, G.C.
G.C. Edmondson (1922- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes)

Edwards, Malcolm
Malcolm Edwards (1949- ) (Jo Fletcher. (c) 1995 Jo Fletcher)

Editorial Practices
From The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, John Clute and Peter Nicholls,
eds.In Contents of this Encyclopedia we briefly describe the principles
governing its construction, and the kinds of information which may be
found here. We have tried throughout to present this material as clearly
as possible, but some pointers may be helpful.CROSS-REFERENCES1.
Approximately 2100 out of the 6460+ entries in the encyclopedia are
cross-reference entries. Many simply cross-refer a term to the entry where
it is covered, for example: PERU LATIN AMERICA.When one name is simply
cross-referenced to a second, then the first name is a pseudonym of the
second that has been used on a book, for example: O'DONNELL, K.M. Barry N.
MALZBERG.When one name is cross-referenced to a second but with the
addition of an [s], then the first name is a pseudonym of the second but
has been used only for stories, for example: SMITH, WOODROW WILSON Henry
KUTTNER.When one name is cross-referenced to another entry but with the
addition of an [r], then the first name is not a pseudonym of the second,
for example: SMITH, LAURA Seth McEVOYSPITTEL, OLAF R. GERMANY.2. Within
the text of entries, and in the See also sections attached to many of
them, any word given in CAPITALS constitutes a cross-reference.AUTHOR,
CRITIC AND EDITOR ENTRIES Names Each entry begins with the author's full
real name, working name or pseudonym, whichever is best known. We step
outside normal practice only with the concept of the working name, which
we have defined as one which encompasses in easily recognizeable form a
significant portion of a full name - as in the case of Connie Willis,
which we treat as Constance Elaine Trimmer Willis's working name.Titles
For all authors writing in English we attempt to treat or to list every
adult book with any significant sf content, to treat or (more commonly)
simply to list all fantasy and horror books, and to at least list most
children's books of genre interest; for foreign-language authors we do not
claim to list all sf/horror/fantasy work not translated into English. We
list most nonfiction works written by sf authors about the field or about
other authors; we also list, sometimes selectively, nonfiction works of
science or popular science by sf authors who also work in those fields. In
author entries, each book is given a full ascription (see below for
details); other kinds of entry (theme entries in particular) often
identify titles in a briefer format. In our selection of titles we have
tended to be extremely catholic; one may occasionally find - especially in
the Other works list of titles at the foot of some entries - novels whose
generic status is doubtful, and collections containing only a few relevant
stories. This is deliberate: when we err, we prefer to do so through
inclusion rather than exclusion.We do not list all short stories by
authors.Story titles are given in normal face, within double quotes (""),
with dates in normal face. Book titles are given in italics with dates in
bold face. Subtitles are sometimes omitted, though we do include them when
appropriate. We do so for clarity's sake - there are, for instance, three
Stanley G. Weinbaum collections which can be distinguished only through
subtitles: A Martian Odyssey, and Others (coll 1949), A Maritan Odyssey,
and Other Classics of Science Fiction (coll 1962), and A Martian Odyssey,
and Other Science Fiction Tales (coll 1975). And we list subtitles when
they seem to be of inherent interest; for instance, Keith Laumer's Bolo:
The Annals of the Dinochrome Brigade (coll of linked stories 1976). Series
titles are given in bold face.We generally give the title of singletons -
books which are not part of series - according to normal bibliographical
practice by which the title as it appears on the title page (rather than
on the cover or elsewhere) is deemed the true title. With books which are
part of series, we have decided that normal bibliographical practice is of
little use in helping sf readers through the often confusing tangle of
conventions used to identify (and advertise) this category of title. Where
there is no series identification, we list the title only as we would with
a singleton, though in a context which makes clear its connection to its
series-mates. Where series are accorded some form of ongoing title,
wherever placed, we try to ascribe the first volume in full, but
subsequently (as soon as individual volume titles can be clearly
distinguished) we reduce that overall title to a number: as in David
Meltzer's Brain Plant sequence, which we render as Brain Plant #1: Lovely
(1969), #2: Healer (1969), #3: Out (1969) and #4: Glue Factory
(1969).Ghost titles and projected titles Books whose existence we doubt
and books whose release we had not confirmed by press time we give in
normal face between chevrons (), giving their publication date in normal
face.Ties We define a Tie as any text whose contents take their substance
from some prior inspiration, which may be a shared-world bible, a film, a
tv series, a role-playing or other form of game. All such novels,
collections, anthologies and omnibuses are identified by an asterisk (*)
placed immediately after the title, as with Donald F. Glut's The Empire
Strikes Back* (1980), which novelizes the film The Empire Strikes
Back.Ascription data about titles is contained within brackets, and has
been kept as simple as is consistent with our desire to provide as much
information as we can, within the constraints of our encyclopedia format.
We do not, for instance, normally provide full bibliographic data (i.e.,
city of publication, publisher, pagination, etc.), where we discuss and
recommend various sf and fantasy checklists. Most novels - i.e., Isaac
Asimov's The Gods Themselves (1972) - therefore need no more than a simple
date of publication; collections can be identified by the term "coll"
placed directly before the date.However, we use several further terms to
describe books. Abbreviations placed before the date include: collcoll of
linked storiesfixupanthomni A fixup - briefly - is a book composed of
previously written stories which have been cemented together. An anth is
an anthology, while an omni is an omnibus - a book that assembles
previously published volumes.Abbreviations placed after the date include:
chap ( chapbook)DOS"Chap" designates a book fewer than 100pp in length;
"dos" designates two titles usually (but not always) bound back-to-back
and upside down with respect to one another. We also indicate country of
publication when a book was first published in a country other than its
author's normal country of residence, as with Thomas M. Disch's 334 (coll
of linked stories 1972 UK).When titles are published in two countries
within a few weeks of one another we "follow the flag" and treat first
publication as being in the author's country of residence.We give variant
titles, where they exist, for all books and films. A variant title may be
identified by the abbreviation vt placed initially, as in Daniel F.
Galouye's Counterfeit World (1964 UK; vt Simulacron-3 1964 US). We treat
vts as variants of a main title, and therefore do not print their dates in
boldface.We designate revised editions of all books listed. However, we
are not always able to specify the nature of the revision, in which case
the revised edition will be identified by the abbreviation rev placed
initially, as in Marta Randall's Islands (1976; rev 1980); if we have
further knowledge, we use such terms as cut, exp, much exp, text restored,
all of which are intended to be self-evident.In the case of novels, we
attempt to give magazine publication where it precedes book publication by
three or more years, as with George Allen England's The Golden Blight
(1912 Cavalier; 1916). We usually give the magazine title of a story when
this differs from the book title, though we do so less consistently in
cases where the story was published two years or less before the book
version.Translations Whenever possible we notate translated books
according to the following example by Vladimir Nabokov, Priglashenie na
kasn' (1938 France; trans Dmitri Nabokov and VN as Invitation to a
Beheading 1959 US). As we treat translations as separate entities, we date
them in bold face. We do not, however, necessarily list all variant
translations, sometimes giving only the first. When untranslated books are
mentioned, a rough English translation of the title appears in square
brackets immediately after the original, as with Arno Schmidt's Schwarze
Spiegel "Black Mirrors" (1963).CHECKLIST OF ABBREVIATIONS Abbreviations
listed below in bold face are explained in Editorial Practices You May
Need to Know About. Abbreviations in CAPITALS also have their own entries,
where they are more fully explained. projected or ghost title refer to
(the entry thus indicated)* a tied title ( TIE)# numberAMZ AMAZING
STORIESanth anthologyASF ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION/ANALOGb/w - black and
whitechap - under 100pp coll - collectiondir - directed/directorDOS -
bound back-to-backed - edited/editoredn - editionexp - expandedFIXUP -
novel made up from storiesFSF - The MAGAZINE OF FANTASY AND SCIENCE
FICTIONGal - GALAXY SCIENCE FICTIONIASFM - ISAAC ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION
MAGAZINENW - NEW WORLDSomni - omnibusprod - produced/producer[r] - not a
pseudonym of the name to which it is cross-referredrev - revised[s] -
pseudonym used only for short fictionsf - science fictiontrans -
translatedtv - televisionTWS - THRILLING WONDER STORIESvar mags -
published in various magazinesvol - volumevt - variant titleWW - World War

Ellis's The Steam Man of the Prairies
Mechanical men were common figures in nineteenth century fiction; Edward
S. ELLIS's creation was based on an actual device, and inspired imitations
in its turn.See Also: ROBOTS.

Ellison's 'Repent, Harlequin!
Harlan ELLISON spent a decade-long apprenticeship before he discovered
his own voice. "Repent, Harlequin! Said the Ticktockman+" is one of the
most frequently reprinted stories in SF.

Ellison's best stories
Harlan ELLISON produced his finest fiction in the late sixties and early
seventies, including "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" and "Pretty
Maggie Moneyeyes". These intense and memorable stories have remained
popular for the past three decades.

E.T.: The Extraterrestrial
For many years the top money grosser, E.T.: THE EXTRATERRESTRIALis the
story of a friendly alien who encounters suburban America.See Also:
CINEMA; STEVEN SPIELBERG.

First issue of Interzone
The first British SF magazine since NEW WORLDS, INTERZONE began as a slim
quarterly but grew to be a substantial monthly.

Fourth Mansions
LAFFERTY, R(APHAEL) A(LOYSIUS)(Ace, 1969)An innocent tries to understand
the enigmatic events and secret organizations that are symbolic
incarnations of the forces embodied in the (highly problematic) moral
progress and spiritual evolution of humankind. A bizarre tour de force;
one of the finest examples of American avant-garde SF. Compare Roger
Zelazny's THIS IMMORTAI and Samuel R. Delany's THE EINSTEIN INTERSECTION.
See also HISTORY IN SF

Fire on the Mountain
BISSON, TERRY( Arbor, 1988)The Civil War as we know it never occurred in
this alternate universe because John Brown, with Harriet Tubman acting as
his lieutenant, sparked a successful slave rebellion. The outcome was a
divided United States with an African-American-dominated South emerging as
a socialist utopia. This somehow led to a Europe that avoided world war
and to an Africa that developed free from the worst results of colonial
rule. The viewpoint alternates between Yasmin, a successful anthropologist
and citizen of the utopian South; her great grandfather Abraham, who, born
a slave, took part in the rebellion; and Dr. Hunter, a white abolitionist
who served as Abraham's mentor. The novel's basic premise seems a bit
farfetched, but Bisson's alternate 20th century is endlessly fascinating
and well worth a visit. Compare Harry Turtledove's The Guns of the South
(1992). See also ALTERNATE WORLDS

Friday
HEINLEIN, ROBERT A(NSON)(Holt, 1982)An artificially created superwoman,
courier for a secret organization, has to fend for herself when the
decline of the West reaches its climax; she ultimately finds a new raison
d'etre on the extraterrestrial frontier. Welcomed by Heinlein fans as
action-adventure respite from his more introspective works, but actually
related very closely to some sections of Time Enough for Love and refers
to much earlier material ("Gulf," 1949). See also SUPERMAN

Four Hundred Billion Stars
MCAULEY, PAUL J. (Ballantine, 1988)Explorers from Earth discover a planet
that doesn't seem old enough geologically to have developed its complex
native ecology. Adding to the mystery, abandoned, hive-like cities are
discovered, even though the dominate life-form, the nomadic herders, seem
to be only semi-sentient. Humanity is currently engaged in an
interplanetary war elsewhere in the galaxy, and the naval officers in
charge of the expedition fear there may be some connection between the
primitive herders and humanity's enemy. This seems unlikely until someone
notices that the abandoned hive-cities are coming to life and the herders
are beginning to change their age-old behavior patterns. McAuley's
exploration of the complex herder species is fascinating and his
protagonist, the astronomer Dorthy Yoshida, an unwilling psychic, is well
developed. Eternal Light (1991) is a direct sequel to Four Hundred Billion
Stars and is every bit as good. Of the Fall (1989), titled Secret
Harmonies (1991) in its British edition, is a solid, but relatively minor
tale set in the same universe as the other two novels. All three books,
along with McAuley's first short story collection, The King of the Hill
(1991), demonstrate the author's genius for creating fascinating aliens.
Compare Gregory Benford's Great Sky River and its sequels. See also ALIENS

Flowers for Algernon
KEYES, DANIEL(Harcourt, 1966)Developed from a Hugo-winning short story
with the same title. A mentally retarded man's intelligence enhanced, to
that of a normal adult and then to supergenius. "Progress reports" in his
diary, with successive changes in diction and spelling as well as
intellectual content, chronicle his triumphant progress; and then, as the
treatment fails, the reports record his collapse back into subnormality. A
sensitively told, low-key masterpiece that was made into a surprisingly
good film, given Hollywood's usual heavy-handed ways with "sci-fi."
Compare Poul Anderson's Brain Wave and Theodore Sturgeon's "Maturity" (in
Without Sorcery), contrast Howard Fast's "The First Men" (in The Edge of
Tomorrow), and Wilmar H. Shiras's Children of the Atom . See also
INTELLIGENCE

Fahrenheit 451
BRADBURY, RAY (DOUGLAS)(Ballantine, 1953)Expanded from a novella "The
Fireman" (Galaxy, February 1951; SFHF). Firemen no longer put out fires;
they start them, for the purpose of burning books. The title refers to the
temperature at which paper will catch fire. The hero, a fireman but a
closet reader, eventually joins an underground of itinerants who have
committed the literary classics to memory and recite them orally. The much
admired film made from the novel, by making the firemen into brutal,
black-uniformed Nazi types, missed a point made by Bradbury early on: that
hostility to books and ideas was generated by ordinary people, not simply
imposed upon them by government. Frequently reprinted since its original
publication and often used in the classroom, although I consider the
original novella from the magazine tighter, more vivid, less diffuse-in
short a better literary work than the full-length book. See also DYSTOPIAS

Foundation's Edge
ASIMOV, ISAAC(Doubleday, 1982)Fourth volume of the Foundation series,
uncomfortably extending its themes and beginning the work of binding it
into a common future history with Asimov's robot stories. In the 1940s the
series seemed sophisticated in introducing political themes into space
opera, but SF has evolved so far in the meantime that the new book seems
rather quaint despite its popularity. It is a feast of nostalgia for
longtime readers. The story continues in Foundation and Earth (1986), with
the hero pursuing his quest to track down the origins of mankind and
gradually learning the truth about Earth. Prelude to Foundation (1988) and
Forward the Foundation (1993), which Asimov left unfinished at his death,
predate the other novels in the series in terms of internal chronology,
describing the early life of Hari Seldon. Hugo winner, 1983. See also
GALACTIC EMPIRES

The Foundation Trilogy
ASIMOV, LSAAC(Doubleday,1963)Asimov described the gradual fall of a
GALACTIC EMPIRE, and the eftort of psychohistorian Hari Seldon to shorten
the ensuing Dark Ages by setting up a hidden Foundation in a remote corner
of the galaxy, in stories published in Astounding in the early 1940s and
collected as Foundation (Gnome,1951). Other, longer Astounding stories,
describing an attempt at reconquest of the Foundation by the last
competent imperial general Bel Riose (like Belisarius, who similarly
attempted to reconquer the Roman West for East Roman Emperor Justinian),
and an initially more successful capture of the Foundation by "the Mule,"
a mutant not subject as an individual to the statistical "laws of
psychohistory," were collected as Foundation and Empire (Gnome,1952).
Finally, two Astounding serials in the late forties described the Mule's
search for a Second Foundation, established by Seldon as a backup in case
something went wrong for the First; these became Second Foundation (Gnome,
1953). Asimov then laid this theme aside for thirty years, until popular
demand and his publisher's prodding led him to compose Foundation's Edge,
Foundation and Earth, and a "prequel," Prelude to Foundation , describing
how Hari Seldon discovered the laws of psychohistory in the first place.
At the time of his death in 1992 Asimov had completed four further
adventures of Hari Seldon, which were collected as Forward the Foundation.
Special Hugo Award for all time best series, l966.

Falling Free
BUJOLD, LOIS MCMASTER(Baen, 1988)Leo Graf, a welding engineer hired to
train workers on a space station, is astonished to discover that his new
pupils are "quaddies," genetically engineered living tools with extra arms
where normal people have legs. Designed by the GalacTech corporation to be
perfect zero-gravity employees, the quaddies unfortunately have failed to
turn a profit for their owner/employers. Soon after Graf's arrival, the
corporation decides to cut its losses and return the quaddies to Earth,
where they will presumably be dumped in nursing homes on a small pension.
The quaddies, however, have other ideas, and convince Graf to join them in
revolt. Originally published as a serial in Analog in 1987-1988, this is
an example of old-fashioned, Campbell-style hard SF at its best, but with
a fascinating FEMINIST twist. Compare Allan Steele's Orbital Decay. Nebula
winner, 1988

Fundamental Disch
DISCH, THOMAS M.(Bantam, 1980)Disch's longest and most comprehensive
collection, which includes both SF, fantasy, and contemporary stories. In
addition to "The Asian Shore," Disch's celebrated tale of an American
architect who succumbs to the sense of the arbitrary that the landscape
and architecture of Istanbul come to represent, the volume also contains
"Bodies" and "Angouleme," two especially strong stories from the sequence
of tales that make up the novel 334. Some stories, such as the elegant and
disconcerting "Slaves," are not science fiction at all, while others,
including "The Squirrel Cage" and "The Master of the Milford Altarpiece,"
are metafictions from the heyday of the NEW WAVE. "Et in Arcadia Ego," one
of Disch's few works of off-planet pure SF, treats its theme in a manner
that most aficionados of hard SF would find startling, even
incomprehensible. Also included are an opera libretto (of "Frankenstein"),
an essay on "The Uses of Fiction," and an introductory essay by Samuel R.
Delany. See also CITIES

Fool's Run
MCKILLIP, PATRICIA A(NNE)(Warner, 1987) CYBERPUNK SF by a writer better
known for her high fantasy. Several years ago Terra Viridian murdered some
1,500 innocent people in response to an overwhelming but unexplained
vision. Now, apparently psychotic, she bides her time in the Underground,
a grim orbital penal colony. When a high-tech band is brought up to the
Underground to give a performance, the stage is set for some very strange
goings-on. Although the plot of Fool's Run is occasionally a bit
confusing, this is a beautifully written novel with lots of lush visual
imagery. Compare Pat Cadigan's SYNNERS and Norman Spinrad's Little Heroes.

Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions
ABBOTT, EDWIN A. (as A Square)(Seeley, 1884)The narrator, citizen of a
two-dimensional world, uses the land for some satire, especially of
education and women. He briefly envisions a one-dimensional world
(Lineland) where motion is impossible. A three-dimensional man (Sphere)
intrudes into the plane of Flatland, thereby giving knowledge of
Spaceland. The two speculate about a world of four dimensions. The book
becomes a mathematician's delight, an exercise in the limits of
perception. Compare the ingenious speculations in A. K. Dewdney's The
Planiverse (1984). See also MATHEMATICS

Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus
SHELLEY, MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT(1818; rev. ed. 1831) Ed. by James Rieger
(Bobbs-Merrill, 1974); Ed. by Leonard Wolf (Clarkson Potter, 1977)Whatever
her literary indebtedness-classical myth, Faustus, or Milton-Mary Shelley
gave form to one of the enduring myths of SF: the creation of life by
science. Guilty of the sin of intellectual pride, Victor Frankenstein
epitomizes a shift in the scientists of the 19th century in that he turns
from alchemy to electrical forces, a phenomenon that fascinated writers
throughout the century. Mary Shelley acknowledged an indebtedness to the
physiologists of Germany and Dr. Erasmus Darwin. Brian W. Aldiss has
argued that Frankenstein is the first SF novel, although H. G. Wells
called it more magic than science. See Aldiss's Frankenstein Unboundfor a
late treatment of the theme. The 1831 edition is commonly reprinted.
Rieger and Wolf reprint the 1818 edition. Rieger includes variations and
notes, Wolf many illustrations along with notes. See also MONSTERS

Famous Fantastic Mysteries
Famous Fantastic Mysteries, April 1942 Published by The Frank A. Munsey
Co. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. The
Frank A. Munsey Company. (c) 1942 The Frank A. Munsey Company.)

Famous Science Fiction
Famous Science Fiction, 1967 / No. 3 Published by Health Knowledge, Inc.
Cover illustration by Virgil Finlay (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Health Knowledge, Inc. (c) 1967 Health
Knowledge, Inc.)

Fantastic Adventures
Fantastic Adventures, Feb. 1950 Published by Ziff-Davis Co. Cover
illustration by Robert Gibson Jones (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR, Inc. (c)
1950 TSR, Inc.)

Fantastic Science Fiction
Fantastic Science Fiction, 1952 / No. 2 Published by Capitol Stories,
Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Capitol Stories, Inc. (c) 1952 Capitol Stories, Inc.)

Fantastic Story Quarterly
Fantastic Story Quarterly, Spring 1950 Published by Best Books, Inc.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Best Books,
Inc. (c) 1950 Best Books, Inc.)

Fantastic Universe
Fantastic Universe, June 1956 Published by King Size Publications, Inc.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.King Size
Publications, Inc. (c) 1956 King Size Publications, Inc.)

Fantasy
Fantasy, 1939 Published by George Newnes, Ltd. Cover illustration by S.R.
Drigin (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
George Newnes, Ltd. (c) 1969 George Newnes, Ltd.)

Fantasy Book
Fantasy Book, Jan. 1950 Published by Fantasy Publishing Co. Cover
illustration by Jack Gaughan (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Publishing Co. (c) 1950 Fantasy Publishing Co.)

Fantasy Book
Fantasy Book, June 1986 Published by Fantasy Book Enterprises Cover
illustration by Corey Wolfe (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Fantasy Book Enterprises. (c) 1986 Fantasy Book
Enterprises)

Fantasy Commentator
Fantasy Commentator, Winter 1989-90 Published by A. Langley Searles Cover
illustration by Frank R. Paul (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of the Estate of Frank R. Paul, and A. Langley
Searles, FANTASY COMMENTATOR. (c) 1989 A. Langley Searles)

Fantasy Fiction/Fantasy Stories
Fantasy Fiction/Fantasy Stories, May 1950 Published by Megabook, Inc.
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Megabook,
Inc. (c) 1950 Megabook, Inc.)

Fantasy Magazine/Fantasy Fiction
Fantasy Magazine/Fantasy Fiction, Aug. 1953 Published by Future
Publications, Inc. Cover illustration by Hannes Bok (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Future Publications, Inc. (c) 1953
Future Publications, Inc.)

Fantasy Review
Fantasy Review, May 1984 Published by Florida Atlantic University Cover
illustration by Ken McGregor (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Florida Atlantic University. (c) 1984 Florida Atlantic
University)

Fantasy Review
Fantasy Review, 1946-47 Published by Vampire (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Vampire. (c) 1946 Vampire)

Far Frontiers
Far Frontiers, Spring 1986 / Vol. V Published by Baen Publishing
Enterprises (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of Baen Publishing Enterprises. (c) 1986 Baen Publishing
Enterprises)

File 770
File 770, March 1987 Published by Mike Glyer Cover illustration by Brad
Foster (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Mike
Glyer. (c) 1987 Mike Glyer)

Forgotten Fantasy
Forgotten Fantasy, Dec. 1970 Published by Nectar Press, Inc. Cover
illustration by George Barr (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Nectar Press, Inc. (c) 1970 Nectar Press, Inc.)

Foundation
Foundation, 1957 Published by Gregg Press (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Gregg Press. (c) 1957 Gregg Press)

Frank Reade Library
Frank Reade Library, Sept. 1892 Published by Frank Tousey, Publisher
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Frank
Tousey, Publisher. (c) 1982 Garland Publishing, Inc.)

Future Fiction
Future Fiction, Aug. 1941 Published by Columbia Publications, Inc. Cover
illustration by Forte (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc. (c) 1941 Columbia Publications,
Inc.)

Future Science Fiction
Future Science Fiction, Nov. 1953 Published by Columbia Publications,
Inc. Cover illustration by Alex Schomburg (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Columbia Publications, Inc. (c)
1953 Columbia Publications, Inc.)

Futuristic Science Stories
Futuristic Science Stories, No. 9 Published by John Spencer & Co. (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. John Spencer & Co.
)

Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions
Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions by Edwin A. Abbott Cover: Little,
Brown & Co., 1915 illustration by Edwin A. Abbott (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Published by Little, Brown and
Company (Inc.) (c) 1915 Little, Brown and Company (Inc.))

First Light
First Light by Peter Ackroyd Cover: Grove Weidenfeld, 1989 (First
American Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Courtesy of Grove / Atlantic, Inc. (c) 1989 Grove Weidenfeld)

Freedom's Rangers
Freedom's Rangers by Keith W. Andrews Cover: Berkley, 1989 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1989 The Berkley Publishing Group Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Fourth Connection, The
The Fourth Connection by R.D. Bagnall Cover: Dennis Dobson, 1975
illustration by Richard Weaver (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Dennis Dobson (c) 1975 Dennis Dobson Limited)

First Team, The
The First Team by John Ball Cover: Bantam, 1971 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1971
Bantam Books)

Fall of Chronopolis, The
The Fall of Chronopolis by Barrington Bayley Cover: DAW Books, 1974
illustration by Kelly Freas (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1974
DAW Books, Inc.)

From Monkey to Man
From Monkey to Man by Austin Bierbower Cover: Ingersoll Beacon Co., 1906
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Fail-Safe
Fail-Safe by Eugene Burdick Cover: Dell, 1962 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Dell Books,
a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1962 Dell
Books)

Fire, Burn!
Fire, Burn! by John Dickson Carr Cover: Hamish Hamilton, 1957
illustration by Philip Gough (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Hamish Hamilton, London. (c) 1957 Hamish
Hamilton )

Future Imperfect
Future Imperfect by Bridget Chetwynd Cover: Hutchinson & Co., 1946 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
Century House UK Limited. (c) 1946 Hutchinson & Co.)

Funco File, The
The Funco File by Burt Cole Cover: Avon Books, 1970 (Casey Brown/Eaton
Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by permission of Avon
Books. (c) 1970 Avon Books)

Flood, The
The Flood by John Creasey Cover: Hodder and Stoughton, 1958 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with
permission of Hodder Headline, POC. (c) 1958 Hodder and Stoughton)

Fifteen Hundred Miles an Hour
Fifteen Hundred Miles an Hour by Charles Dixon Cover: Bliss, Sands and
Foster, 1895 illustration by Arthur Layard (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Flying Draper, The
The Flying Draper by Ronald Fraser Cover: Jonathan Cape, 1942 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Courtesy of Random
Century House UK Limited. (c) 1942 Johnathan Cape London)

Foolish Immortal, The
The Foolish Immortal Paul Gallico Cover: Lancer Books, 1953 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. (c) 1953 Lancer
Books)

Father to the Man
Father to the Man by John Gribbin Cover: TOR Books/Tom Doherty
Associates, 1989 (First Edition) illustration by David Mattingly (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
permission of Tor Books. (c) 1989 Tor Books)

Fourth Seal, The
The Fourth Seal by Pelham Groom Cover: Jarrold's (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Jarrolds
Publishers Limited. )

First American King, The
The First American King by George Hastings Cover: Smart Set Publishing
Co., 1904 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Fantazius Mallare
Fantazius Mallare by Ben Hecht Cover: Covici-McGee, 1922 illustration by
Wallace Smith (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1922 Covici-McGee)

First to Awaken, The
The First to Awaken by Granville Hicks & Richard M. Bennett Cover: Modern
Age Books, 1940 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. (c) 1940 Modern Age Books)

FreeMaster
FreeMaster by Kris Jensen Cover: DAW Books, 1990 (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of DAW
Books, Inc. (c) 1990 DAW Books, Inc.)

Flyer
Flyer by Gail Kimberly Cover: Popular Library, 1975 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by permission of
Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1975 Popular Library, Inc.)

Fire Sanctuary
Fire Sanctuary by Katharine Eliska Kimbriel Cover: Popular Library, 1986
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted
by permission of Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1986 Popular Library)

Fearsome Island, The
The Fearsome Island by Albert Kinross Cover: Herbert S. Stone & Co., 1896
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. )

Falsivir's Travels
Falsivir's Travels by Thomas Lee Cover: Proprietor, 1886 (First Edition)
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Forbidden Planet
Forbidden Planet by W.J. Stuart (Philip MacDonald) Cover: Bantam, 1956
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1956 Bantam Books)

Find the Kirillian!
Find the Kirillian! by Seth McEvoy Cover: Bantam, 1985 illustration by
Stephen Fastner (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1985 Bantam Books)

Fall of Worlds, The
The Fall of Worlds by Francine Mezo Cover: Avon Books, 1980 (Casey
Brown/Eaton Collection, University of Calif., Riverside. Shown by
permission of Avon Books. (c) 1980 Avon Books)

Further East than Asia
Further East than Asia by Ward Muir Cover: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton,
Kent & Co., 1919 (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins Publishers Limited.
)

Final War & Other Fantasies
Final War & Other Fantasies by K.M. O'Donnell Cover: Ace Books, 1969 (M.
M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. (c) 1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Flame Winds
Flame Winds by Norvell W. Page Cover: Berkley, 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1969 The
Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or transmission
without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Final Solution
Final Solution by Richard E. Peck Cover: Doubleday, 1973 (First Edition)
illustration by Anita Seigel (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection., Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1973 Doubleday)

Fault Lines
Fault Lines by Alvah Reida Cover: Berkley, 1972 (First Edition) (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1972 The Berkley Publishing Group. Reproduction, duplication or
transmission without appropriate permission is a violation of Federal
copyright laws.)

Flight from Time One
Flight from Time One by Deane Romano Covre: Walker & Co., 1972 (First
Edition) illustration by Enrico Scull (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection,
Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of Walker and
Company. (c) 1972 Walker & Company)

Frozen Pirate, The
The Frozen Pirate by W. Clark Russell Cover: Donohue, Henneberry & Co.
(First Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif.,
Riverside. Donohue, Henneberry & Co. )

Frankenstein
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Cover: Colburn & Bentley, 1831 (M. M.
Kavanagh. )

Firebird
Firebird by Kathy Tyers Cover: Bantam, 1987 illustration by Kevin Johnson
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1987 Bantam Books)

Five Weeks in a Balloon
Five Weeks in a Balloon by Jules Verne Cover: Worthington Co., 1885
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. )

Forty Years On
Forty Years On by Doreen Wallace Cover: HarperCollins/Collins, 1958
illustration by Kenneth Farnhill (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ.
of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of HarperCollins
Publishers Limited. (c) 1958 Collins)

Futuretrack 5
Futuretrack 5 by Robert Westall Cover: Green Willow Books, 1983
illustration by Dav Holmes (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside. Green Willow Books (c) 1983 Green Willow Books)

First Flight
First Flight by Chris Claremont Cover: Ace Books, 1987 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

First on the Moon
First on the Moon by Jeff Sutton Cover: Ace Books, 1958 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1958 Ace
Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate
permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Freehold
Freehold by William C. Dietz Cover: Ace Books, 1987 illustration by
Sandra Filipucci (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The
Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1987 Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Far-Seer
Far-Seer by Rob Sawyer Cover: Ace Books (First Edition) illustration by
Tom Kidd (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1995 Ace Books. Reproduction,
duplication or transmission without appropriate permission is a violation
of Federal copyright laws.)

Fourth Mansions
Fourth Mansions by R.A. Lafferty Cover: Ace Books, 1969 (First Edition)
illustration by Leo & Diane Dillon (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by
arrangement with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c)
1969 Ace Books. Reproduction, duplication or transmission without
appropriate permission is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Forever Drug, The
The Forever Drug by Steve Perry Cover: Ace Books (First Edition)
illustration by Barclay Shaw (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement
with The Berkley Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) Ace Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

Fire on the Mountain
Fire on the Mountain by Terry Bisson Cover: Arbor House, 1988 (First
Edition) illustration by Peter Thorpe (M. M. Kavanagh. Shown by permission
of William Morrow & Co., Inc. (c) 1988 Arbor House)

Five-Twelfths of Heaven
Five-Twelfths of Heaven by Melissa Scott Cover: Baen Books (First
Edition) illustration by Kevin Johnson (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) Baen Books)

Frontera
Frontera by Lewis Shiner Cover: Baen Books (First Edition) illustration
by Vincent Di Fate (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of BAEN
PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1984 Baen Books)

Fire
Fire by Alan Rodgers Cover: Bantam, 1990 illustration by Alan Ayers
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1990 Bantam Books)

Female Man, The
The Female Man by Joanna Russ Cover: Bantam, 1975 (First Edition) (M. M.
Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1975 Bantam Books)

Full Spectrum 4
Full Spectrum 4 by Lou Aronica, Amy Stout & Betsy Mitchell Cover: Bantam
(First Edition) (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1993 Bantam
Books)

Fossil
Fossil by Hal Clement Cover: DAW Books, 1993 (First Edition) illustration
by Romas (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c)
1993 DAW Books, Inc.)

Forests of the Night
Forests of the Night by S. Andrew Swann Cover: DAW Books (First Edition)
illustration by Jim Burns (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1993 DAW Books, Inc.)

Fugue for a Darkening Island
Fugue for a Darkening Island by Christopher Priest Cover: Faber and Faber
Ltd., 1972 (First Edition) illustration by Judith Ann Lawrence (M. M.
Kavanagh. Cover: Judith Ann Lawrence. Courtesy of Faber and Faber Ltd. (c)
1972 Faber and Faber Ltd.)

Famous Fantastic Classics
Famous Fantastic Classics by Ralph Milne Farley Cover: Fax Collector's
Edition, 1975 illustration by Michael William Kaluta (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Fax Collector's Edition (c)
1975 Fax Collector's Edition)

Foundation
Foundation by Isaac Asimov Cover: Gnome Press, 1951 (First Edition)
illustration by David Kyle (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of
Calif., Riverside.Gnome Press (c) 1951 Gnome Press)

Final Blackout
Final Blackout by L. Ron Hubbard Cover: Hadley Publishing Co., 1940
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.Hadley
Publishing (c) 1940 Hadley Publishing Company)

Facial Justice
Facial Justice by L.P. Hartley Cover: Doubleday, 1960 illustration by
Vera Bock (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Used by Permission of Doubleday, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1960 Doubleday & Co.)

Flowers for Algernon
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes Cover: Bantam, 1967 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1967
Bantam Books)

Fade-Out
Fade-Out by Patrick Tilley Cover: Dell, 1975 illustration by Ken Kelley
(Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by
Permission of Dell Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. (c) 1975 Dell Books)

Four-Gated City, The
The Four-Gated City by Doris Lessing Cover: Bantam, 1969 (Casey Brown/The
Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Used by Permission of Bantam
Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1969
Bantam Books)

Forever War, The
The Forever War by Joe Haldeman Cover: St. Martin's Press, 1974 (First
Edition) (Casey Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside.
Courtesy of St. Martin's Press. (c) 1974 St. Martin's Press)

Finder
Finder by Emma Bull Cover: TOR (First Edition) illustration by Richard
Bober (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1994 Tor
Books)

Fourth Guardian, The
The Fourth Guardian by Ronald Anthony Cross Cover: TOR (First Edition)
illustration by Ron Walotsky (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Tor Books. (c) 1994 Tor Books)

Flame Is Green, The
The Flame Is Green by R.A. Lafferty Cover: Walker & Co. (First Edition)
illustration by Richard Roth (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of
Walker and Company. (c) 1971 Walker & Company)

Find the Feathered Serpent
Find the Feathered Serpent by Evan Hunter Cover: Winston, 1952 (Casey
Brown/The Eaton Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Winston (c) 1952
Winston)

Falling Free
Falling Free by Lois McMaster Bujold Cover: Baen Books, 1988 (First
Edition) illustration by Alan Gutierrez (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of BAEN PUBLISHING ENTERPRISES. (c) 1988 Baen Books)

Flux
Flux by Orson Scott Card Cover: TOR, 1992 illustration by Peter Scanlon
(M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c) 1992 Tor Books)

Faded Sun: Kesrith, The
The Faded Sun: Kesrith by C.J. Cherryh Cover: DAW Books, 1978 (First
Edition) illustration by Gino D'Achille (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with
permission of DAW Books, Inc. (c) 1978 DAW Books, Inc.)

Fundamental Disch
Fundamental Disch by Thomas M. Disch Cover: Bantam, 1980 (M. M. Kavanagh.
Used by Permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell
Publishing Group, Inc. (c) 1980 Bantam Books)

Fool's Run
Fool's Run by Patricia A. McKillip Cover: Popular Library, 1988
illustration by Michael Whelan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of
Warner Books, Inc. (c) 1988 Popular Library)

First Lensman
First Lensman by E.E. Smith Cover: Pyramid Books, 1971 illustration by
Jack Gaughan (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by arrangement with The Berkley
Publishing Group. All rights reserved. (c) 1971 Pyramid Books.
Reproduction, duplication or transmission without appropriate permission
is a violation of Federal copyright laws.)

From the Earth to the Moon
From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne Cover: Bantam, 1993
illustration by Richard Oelze (M. M. Kavanagh. Used by Permission of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
(c) 1993 Bantam Books)

Fire upon the Deep, A
A Fire upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge Cover: TOR, 1993 illustration by
Boris Vallejo (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted by permission of Tor Books. (c)
1993 Tor Books)

Flies of Memory, The
The Flies of Memory by Ian Watson Cover: Carroll & Graf, 1991 (First US
Edition) illustration by Tony Greco & Kersti O'Leary (M. M. Kavanagh.
Reprinted with permission of Tony Greco & Associates, Inc. (c) 1991Carroll
& Graf)

Fantastic
Fantastic, July-Aug. 1953 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1953 TSR, Inc.)

Fantastic
Fantastic, Jan.-Feb. 1953 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1953 TSR, Inc.)

Fantastic
Fantastic, Dec. 1977 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1977 TSR, Inc.)

Fantastic
Fantastic, Nov. 1959 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1959 TSR, Inc.)

Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions
Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions by Edwin A. Abbott Cover: Dover
Books, 1952 illustration by Menten, Inc. (M. M. Kavanagh. Courtesy of
Dover Publications, Inc. (c) 1968 Dover Books)

First Men in the Moon, The
The First Men in the Moon by H.G. Wells Cover: Oxford University Press,
1995 (M. M. Kavanagh. Reprinted with permission of The Oxford University
Press. (c) Oxford University Press. Cover illustration reproduced by
permission of the Mary Evans Picture Library.)

Fantastic
Fantastic, Sept. 1973 Published by TSR, Inc. (Casey Brown/The Eaton
Collection, Univ. of Calif., Riverside. Reprinted with permission of TSR,
Inc. (c) 1973 TSR, Inc.)

Foster, Alan Dean
Alan Dean Foster (1946- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Farmer, Philip Jose
Philip Jose Farmer (1918- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Finch, Sheila
Sheila Finch (1935- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Ford, John M.
John M. Ford (1957- ) (M. C. Valada. (c) 1995 M. C. Valada)

Fast, Howard
Howard Fast (1914- ) ( Bettmann. )

Fiedler, Leslie
Leslie Fiedler (1917- ) (Miriam Berkley. (c) 1995 Miriam Berkley)

Forstchen, William
William R. Forstchen (1950- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Fowler, Karen Joy
Karen Joy Fowler (1950- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Frankowski, Leo A.
Leo A. Frankowski (1943- ) (Beth Gwinn. (c) 1995 Beth Gwinn)

Feeley, Gregory
Gregory Feeley (1955- ) (M. M. Kavanagh (c) 1995 M. M. Kavanagh)

Frankenstein
What hath Mary Shelley wrought? Metaphors, symbols, and a huge influence
on SF. ( (c) Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc.)

Fearn, John Russell
John Russell Fearn (1908-1960) (The Andrew I. Porter Collection. )

Felice, Cynthia
Cynthia Felice (1942- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Fanthorpe, R. L.
R.L. Fanthorpe (1935- ) (Andrew I. Porter. (c) 1995 Andrew I. Porter)

Forward, Robert L.
Robert L. Forward (1932- ) (Rick Hawes. (c) 1995 Rick Hawes )

Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars
A sequel to the original 1936 serial, Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars
(Universal, 1938) brought back Ming the Merciless (Charles Middleton) for
a second assault upon Earth. This time Ming's center of operations is
Mars, a locale made popular by the success of Orson Welles's 1938 radio
broadcast of The War of the Worlds. (The Everett Collection, Inc. )

Fahrenheit 451
Francois Truffaut's film version of Fahrenheit 451 (Anglo Enterprise and
Vineyard/Universal, 1966) reflects the French New Wave more than it does
Hollywood. The moral piety of Ray Bradbury's famous novel has been
replaced with seeming ambivalence; the good guys seem scarcely more
animated than the villains. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Forbidden Planet
Most of the SF films of the 1950s that aspired to respectability presumed
scientific authenticity; the pretentions of Forbidden Planet (MGM, 1956)
were more literary. This loose adaptation of The Tempest is silly in many
respects, but the film possesses a visual splendor unsurpassed in its
time. Robby the Robot became one the most famous figures of 1950s SF
cinema. (Ronald V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Frankenstein
James Whale's adaptation of Frankenstein (Universal, 1931) was not the
first film version of Mary Shelley's novel, and it may not be the best. It
has certainly been the most influential. Virtually every subsequent film
about Frankenstein and his creation use the image created by Boris Karloff
(and makeup artist Jack Pierce) for the monster. (Ronald V.
Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars
This three-sheet poster from the original release of Flash Gordon's Trip
to Mars (Universal, 1938) is high camp at its most exhilarating. (Ronald
V. Borst/Hollywood Movie Posters. )

Flash Gordon
Although its sets were supposed to be Mars and not Mongo, Flash Gordon's
Trip to Mars (Universal, 1938) retains basically the same cast of
characters as the original and remains fun to watch after more than half a
century. ( )

First Americans: Beyond the Sea of Ice, The
The First Americans: Beyond the Sea of Ice by William Sarabande Cover:
Bantam, 1987 (Used by permission of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam
Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. (c) Bantam Books)

Flash Gordon comic born
" FLASH GORDON" first appeared as an American comic strip in 1934 and
continues to this day. The character also inspired a 1936 movie serial, as
well as paperbacks and comic books.See Also: SPACE OPERA.

First SF convention
By the mid-thirties, SF fans were holding meetings and formal
CONVENTIONS. The first US convention was in 1938.

First of Padgett's Gallagher stories
Lewis Padgett's comic series of the drunken inventor Gallagher and his
vain robot is replete with pre-Word War II slang and conventions, yet it
remains funny even today.See Also: C. L. MOORE; Henry KUTTNER.

First issue of F&SF
Called The Magazine of Fantasy in its first issue, the MAGAZINE OF
FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION eschewed interior illustrations and pulp
melodrama to become the most literate of American SF magazines.

First issue of Galaxy
Aggressively marketed to compete with John W. Campbell's ASTOUNDING
SCIENCE FICTION, GALAXY SCIENCE FICTION was a fresh new market with an
open mind, and quickly dominated the SF field.

First Hugo Awards
Officially called the Science Fiction Achievement Awards, the HUGOS are
given out each year at the WORLD SCIENCE FICTION CONVENTION.

Forbidden Planet opens
FORBIDDEN PLANETwas born from a determined effort to produce a quality SF
film - it was based on Shakespeare'sThe Tempest, and it had high
production values. It ended up being enjoyable camp.See Also: CINEMA.

First Milford Conference
Founded by Damon KNIGHT, Judith MERRIL, and James BLISH, the MILFORD
Writer's Conference became an important institution in modern SF, and
inspired other workshop programs that continue today.

First woman wins a Hugo
Anne MCCAFFREY became the first woman to win a BETTAUER, HUGO Award for
fiction with "Weyr Search" in 1968. The following year both she and Kate
WILHELM won the NEBULA Award.


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